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NOVELETS 


MYTHAGO WOOD 

ONE WAY TICKET TO ELSEWHERE 

S H O R 

THE GIFTS OF CONHOON 

NOT RESPONSIBLE! 
PARK AND LOCK IT! 

THERE THE LOVELIES BLEEDING 
INDIGESTION 
DINOSAURS ON BROADWAY 
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DEP . 

BOOKS 

FILMS: Comexalibur 


6 Robert Holdstock 
79 Michael Ward 

T STORIES 

48 John Morressy 

59 John Kessel 

106 Barry N. Malzberg 
109 Thomas Wylde 

119 Tony Sarowitz 

143 Jane Yolen 

R T M E N TS 

40 Barry N. Malzberg 
103 Baird Searles 


SCIENCE: And After Many a 

Summer Dies the Proton 1 33 
LETTERS 1 58 


Isaac Asimov 


COVER BY BARBARA BERGER FOR ''MYTHAGO WOOD" 
CARTOONS: GAHAN WILSON (47), S. HARRIS (105), ED ARNO (118) 


EDWARD L. FERMAN. Editor & Publisher ISAAC ASIMOV. Science Columnist 

DALE FARRELL, Circulation Manager GAHAN WILSON, Cartoonist 

AUDREY FERMAN, Business Manager 
Assistant Editors: ANNE JORDAN, EVAN PHILLIPS, BECKY WILLIAMS 


The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction (ISSN: 0024-984X). Volume 61, No 3, Whole No. 364, September 1981. 
Published monthly by Mercury Press, Inc. at $1.50 per copy Annual subscription $15.00; $17.00 outside of the U S 
(Canadian subscribers; please remit in U S. dollars or add 15%.) Postmaster: send form 3579 to Fantasy and Science 
Fiction, Box 56, Cornwall, Conn. 06753. Publication office, Box 56, Cornwall, Conn. 06753. Second class postage paid 
at Cornwall, Conn. 06753 and at additional mailing offices. Printed in U.S.A. Copyright © 1981 by Mercury Press, Inc. 
All rights, including translations into other languages, reserved. Submissions must be accompanied by stamF>ed, self- 
addressed envelope The publisher assumes no responsibility for return of unsolicited manuscripts 


Here is an elegant and gripping fantasy about the secret of a primary 
oak woodland in England, Its author is 32 years old and writes: "'have 
been free-lancing since I quit medical research iri 1975, Although Ive 
settled with my wife (Sheila) in Hertfordshire, I'm a man of Kent, 
from the area known as Romney Marsh; the woodland and mill-pond 
in "Mythago Wood" exist, in smaller form, a half mile or so from my 
grandmother's house in Tenter den, and it was the sudden vivid 
recollection of exploring the place with my brother that was the 
genesis of the story." Mr, Holdstock has had three novels published in 
the U,S,, and his latest, WHERE THE TIME WINDS BLOW, is 
forthcoming from Pocket Books. 


Mythago Wood 


W 

W When, in 1944, I was called 
away to the war, I felt so resentful of 
my father's barely expressed disap- 
pointment that, on the eve of my de- 
parture, I walked quietly to his desk 
and tore a page out of his notebook, 
the diary in which his silent, obsessive 
work was recorded. The fragment was 
dated simply "August 34," and I read it 
many times, appalled at its incompre- 
hensibility, but content that I had 
stolen at least a tiny part of his life with 
which to support myself through those 
painful, lonely times. 

Following a short and very bitter 

comment on the distractions in his life 
« 

— the rurming of Oak Lodge, our 
family home, the demands of his two 


sons and of his wife (by then, I remem- 
ber, desperately ill and close to the end 
of her life) — was a passage quite 
memorable for its incoherence: 

"A letter from Watkins — agrees 
with me that at certain times of the 
year the aura around the woodland 
could reach as far as the house. Must 
think through the implications of 
this. He is keen to know the power 
of the oak vortex that I have meas- 
ured. What to tell him? Certainly 
not of the first mythago. Have no- 
ticed too that the enrichment of the 
pre-mythago zone is more persis- 
tent, but concomitant with this, am 
distinctly losing my sense of time." 

I treasured this piece of paper for 


6 


Fantasy & Science Fiction 


BY 

ROBERT HOLDSTOCK 


many reasons, for the moment or two 
of my father's passionate interest that it 
represented — and for the way it lock- 
ed me out of its understanding, as he 
had locked me out at home. Every- 
thing he loved, everything I hated. 

I was wounded in early 1945 and in 
a military hospital met a young 
Frenchman and became close friends 
with him. I managed to avoid evacua- 
tion to England, and when the war fin- 
ished I stayed in France, traveling 
south to convalesce in the hills behind 
Marseilles; it was a hot, dry place, 
very still, very slow; I lived v/ith my 
young friend's parents and quickly be- 
came part of the tiny community. 

Letters from my brother Christian, 


who had returned to Oak Lodge after 
the war, arrived every month through- 
out the long year of 1946. They were 
chatty, informative letters, but there 
was an increasing note of tension in 
them, and it was clear that<Ihristian's 
relationship with his father was deteri- 
orating rapidly. I never heard a word 
from the old man himself, but then i 
never expected to; I had long since re- 
signed myself to the fact that, even at 
best, he regarded me with total indif- 
ference. All his family had been an in- 
trusion in his work, and his guilt at ne- 
glecting us, and especially at driving 
his wife to taking her own life, had 
blossomed rapidly, during the early 
years of the war, into an hysterical 
madness that could be truly frighten- 
ing. Which is not to say that he was 
perpetually shouting; on the contrary, 
most of his life was spent in silent, ab- 
sorbed contemplation of the oak 
woodland that bordered our home. At 
first infuriating, because of the dis- 
tance it pul between him and his fami- 
ly, soon those long periods of quiet be- 
came blessed, earnestly welcomed. 

He died in November, 1946, of the 
illness that had afflicted him for years. 
When I heard the news I was tom be- 
tween my unwillingness to return to 
Oak Lodge, at the edge of the Knares- 
thorpe estate in Herefordshire, and 
Christian's obvious distress. He was 
alone, now, in the house where we had 
lived through our childhood together; I 
could imagine him prowling through 
the empty rooms, perhaps sitting in fa- 


Mythago Wood 


7 


ther's dank and unwholesome study 
and remembering the hours of denial, 
the smell of wood and compost that 
the old man had trudged in through the 
glass-paneled doors after his week-long 
sorties into the deep woodlands. The 
forest had spread into that room as if 
my father could not bear to be away 
from the rank undergrowth and cool, 
moist oak glades even when making 
token acknowledgement of his family. 
He made that acknowledgement in the 
only way he knew: by telling us — and 
mainly telling my brother — stories of 
the ancient forestlands beyond the 
house, the primary woodland of oak 
and ash in whose dark interior (he once 
said) wild boar could still be heard and 
smelled and tracked by their spoor. 

I doubt if he had ever seen such a 
creature, but I vividly recalled (in that 
evening as I sat in my room, overlook- 
ing the tiny village in the hills, Chris- 
tian's letter a crushed ball still held in 
my hand) how I had listened to the 
muffled grunting of some woodland 
animal and heard the heavy, unhurried 
crashing of something bulky moving 
inwards, to the winding pathway that 
we called Deep Track, a route that led 
spirally towards the very heartwoods 
of the forest. 

I knew I would have to go home, 
and yet I delayed my departure for 
nearly another year. During that time 
Christian's letters ceased abruptly. In 
his last letter, dated April 10th, he 
wrote of Guiwenneth, of his unusual 
marriage, and hinted that I would be 


surprised by the lovely girl to whom he 
had lost his/'heart, mind, soul, reason, 
cooking ability and just about every- 
thing else, old boy." I wrote to con- 
gratulate him, of course, but there was 
no further communication between us 
for months. 

Eventually I wrote to say I was 
coming home, that I would stay at Oak 
Lodge for a few weeks and then find 
accommodation in one of the nearby 
towns. I said goodbye to France, and 
to the community that had become so 
much a part of my life, and traveled to 
England by bus and train, by ferry, 
and then by train again. And on Au- 
gust 20th, hardly able to believe what 
was happening to me, I arrived by po- 
ny and trap at the disused railway line 
that skirted the edge of the extensive 
Knaresthorpe estate. Oak Lodge lay on 
the far side of the grounds, four miles 
further round the road but accessible 
via the right of way through the es- 
tate's fields and woodlands. I intended 
to take an intermediate route, and so, 
lugging my single, crammed suitcase as 
best I could, I began to walk along the 
grass-covered railway track, peering, 
on occasion, over the high red-brick 
wall that marked the limit of the estate, 
trying to see through the gloom of the 
pungent pine woods. Soon this wood- 
land, and the wall, vanished, and the 
land opened into tight, tree-bordered 
fields, to which I gained access across a 
rickety wooden stile, almost lost be- 
neath briar and full-fruited blackberry 
bushes. I had to trample my way out of 


8 


Fantasy & Science Fiction 


the public domain and so onto the 
south trackway that wound, skirting 
patchy woodland and the stream called 
' sticklebrook/' up to the ivy-covered 
house that was my home. 

It was late morning and very hot as 
1 came in distant sight of Oak Lodge. 
Somewhere off to my left I could hear 
the drone of a tractor. I thought of old 
Alphonse Jeffries, the estate's farm su- 
pervisor, and with memory of his 
weather- tanned, smiling face came im- 
ages of the millpond and fishing for 
pike from his tiny rowboat, 

Memory of the millpond was as 
tranquil as its surface, and I moved 
away from the south track, through 
waist-high nettles and a tangle of ash 
and hawthorn scrub until I came out 
close to the bank of the wide, shadowy 
pool, its full size hidden by the gloom 
of the dense stand of oak woodland 
that began on its far side. Almost hid- 
den among the rushes that crowded the 
nearer edge of the pond was the shal- 
low boat from which we had fished, 
years before; its white paint was flaked 
away almost entirely now, and al- 
though the craft looked watertight, I 
doubted if it would take the weight of 
a full-grown man. I didn't disturb it 
but walked around the bank and sat 
down on the rough concrete steps of 
the crumbling boathouse; from here I 
watched the surface of the pool rip- 
pling with the darting motions of in- 
sects and the occasional passage of a 
fish, just below. 

"A couple of sticks and a bit of 


string ... that's all it takes." 

Christian's voice startled me. He 
must have walked along a beaten track 
from the lodge, hidden from my view 
by the shed. Delighted, I jumped to my 
feet and turned to face him. The shock 
of his appearance was like a physical 
blow to me, and I think he noticed the 
fact, even though I threw my arms 
about him and gave him a powerful 
brotherly bear hug. 

"I had to see this place again," I 
said. 

"I know what you mean," he said, 
as we broke our embrace. "I often walk 
here myself." There was a moment's 
awkward silence as we stared at each 
other. 1 felt, distinctly, that he was not 
particularly pleased to me. "You're 
looking brown and dra/^n, c)d boy," 
he said. "Healthy and ill together...." 

"Mediterranean sun, grape picking, 
and shrapnel. I'm still not one hundred 
percent." I smiled. "But it is good to be 
back, to see you again." 

"Yes," he said dully. "I'm glad 
you've come, Steve. Very glad. Really. 
I'm afraid the place ... well, a bit of a 
mess. I only got your letter yesterday 
and I haven't had a chance to do any- 
thing. Things have changed quite a bit, 
you'll find." 

And he more than anything. I 
could hardly believe that this was the 
chipper, perky young man who had 
left with his army unit in 1944. He had 
aged incredibly, his hair quite streaked 
with grey, more noticeable for his hav- 
ing allowed it to grow long and untidy 


Mythago Wood 


9 


at the back and sides. He reminded me 
very much of father, the same distant, 
distracted look, the same hollow 
cheeks and deeply wrinkled face. But it 
was his whole demeanor that had 
shocked me. He had always been a 
stocky, muscular chap; now he was 
like the proverbial scarecrow, wiry, 
ungainly, on edge aU the time. His eyes 
darted about but never seemed to 
focus upon me. And he smelled. Of 
mothballs, as if the crisp white shirt 
and grey flannels that he wore had 
been dragged out of storage; and 
another smell beyond the naptha ... 
the hint of woodland and grass. There 
was dirt under his fingernails and in his 
hair, and his teeth were yellowing. 

He seemed to relax slightly as the 
minutes ticked by. We sparred a bit, 
laughed a bit, and walked around the 
pond, whacking at the rushes with 
sticks. I could not shake off the feeling 
that I had arrived home at a bad time. 

"Was it difficult ... with the old 
man, I mean? The last days." 

He shook his head. 'There was a 
nurse here for the final two weeks or 
so. I can't exactly say that he went 
peacefully, but she managed to stop 
him damaging himself ... or me, for 
that matter." 

"Your letters certainly suggested a 
growing hostility. To understate the 
case." 

Christian smiled quite grimly anjd 
glanced at me with a curious expres- 
sion, somewhere between agreement 
and suspicion. "You got that from my 


letters, did you? Well, yes. He became 
quite crazed soon after I came back 
from the war. You should have seen 
the place, Steve. You should have seen 
him. I don't think he'd washed for 
months. 1 wondered what he'd been 
eating ... certainly nothing as simple as 
eggs and meat. In all honesty I think, 
for a few months at any rate, he'd been 
eating wood and leaves. He was in a 
wretched state. Although he let me 
help him with his work, he quickly be- 
gan to resent me. He tried to kill me on 
several occasions, Steve. And I mean 
that, really desperate attempts on my 
life. There was a reason for it, I sup- 
pose...." 

I was astonished by what Christian 
was telling me. The image of my father 
had changed from that of a cold, re- 
sentful man into a crazed figure, rant- 
ing at Christian and beating at him 
with his fists. 

"I always thought that, for you at 
least, he had a touch of affection; he al- 
ways told you the stories of the wood; 
I listened, but it was you who sat on 
his knee. Why would he try to kill 
you?" 

"I became too involved," was all 
Christian said. He was keeping some- 
thing back, something of critical 
importance. I could tell from his tone, 
from his sullen, almost resentful ex- 
pression. I had never before felt so dis- 
tant from my own brother. I wondered 
if his behavior was having an affect on 
Guiwenneth, the girl he had married. I 
wondered what sort of atmosphere she 


10 


Fantasy & Science Fiction 


was living in up at Oak Lodge. 

Tentatively, I broached the subject 
of the girl. 

Christian struck angrily at the rush- 
es by the pond. "'Guiwenneth's gone/' 
he said simply, and I stopped, startled. 

"What does that mean, Chris? 
Gone where?" 

"She's just gone, Steve," he snap- 
ped, angry and cornered. "She was fa- 
ther's girl, and she's gone, and that^s all 
there is to it." 

"I don't understand what you 
mean. Where's she gone tol In your 
letter you sounded so happy...." 

"I shouldn't have written about 
her. That was a mistake. Now let it 
drop, will you?" 

After that outburst, my unease 
with Christian grew stronger by the 
minute. There was something very 
wrong with him indeed, and clearly 
Guiwenneth's leaving had contributed 
greatly to the terrible change I could 
see; but I sensed there was something 
more. Unless he spoke about it, how- 
ever, there was no way through to 
him. I could find only the words, "I'm 
sorry." 

"Don't be." 

We walked on, almost to the 
woods, where the ground became 
marshy and unsafe for a few yards be- 
fore vanishing into a musty deepness 
of stone and root and rotting wood. It 
was cool, here, the sun being behind us 
now and beyond the thickly foliaged 
trees. The dense stands of rush moved 
in the breeze, and I watched the rotting 


boat as it shifted slightly on its mooring. 

Christian followed my gaze, but he 
was not looking at the boat or the 
pond; he was lost, somewhere in his 
own thoughts. For a brief moment I ex- 
perienced a jarring sadness at the sight 
of so fine a young man so ruined in ap- 
pearance and attitude. I wanted des- 
perately to touch his arm, to hug him, 
and I could hardly bear the knowledge 
that I was cifraid to do so. 

Quietly, I asked him, "What on 
earth has happened to you, Chris? Are 
you ill?" 

He didn't answer for a moment, 
then said, "I'm not ill," and struck hard 
at a puffball, which shattered and 
spread on the breeze. He looked at me, 
something of resignation in his haunt- 
ed face. "I've been going through a few 
changes, that's all. I've been picking up 
on the old man's work. Perhaps a bit of 
his reclusiveness is rubbing off on me, 
a bit of his detachment." 

"If that's true, then perhaps you 
should give up for a while. The old 
man's obsession with the oak forest 
eventually killed him, and from the 
look of you, you're going the same 
way." 

Christian smiled thinly and chuck- 
ed his reedwhacker out into the pond, 
where it made a dull splash and floated 
in a patch of scummy green algae. "It 
might even be worth dying to achieve 
what he tried to achieve ... and failed." 

I didn't understand the dramatic 
overtone in Christian's statement. The 
work that had so obsessed our father 


Mythago Wood 


11 


had been concerned with mapping the 
woodland and searching for evidence 
of old forest settlements. He had clear- 
ly invented a whole new jargon for 
himself and effectively isolated me 
from any deeper understanding of his 
work. I said this to Christian and add- 
ed, "'Which is all very interesting, but 
hardly that interesting." 

"He was doing much more than 
that, much more than just mapping. 
But do you remember those maps, 
Steve? Incredibly detailed...." 

I could remember one quite clearly, 
the largest map, showing carefully 
marked trackways and easy routes 
through the tangle of trees and stony 
outcrops; it showed clearings drawn 
with almost obsessive precision, each 
glade numbered and identified, and the 
whole forest divided into zones and 
given names. We had made a camp in 
one of the clearings close* to the wood- 
land edge. "We often tried to get deep- 
er into the heartwoods, remember 
those expeditions, Chris? But the deep 
track just ends, and we always man- 
aged to get lost, I seem to recall, and 
very scared." 

"That's true," Christian said quiet- 
ly, looking at me quizzically, and add- 
ed, "What if I told you the forest had 
stopped us entering? Would you 
believe me?" 

I peered into the tangle of brush, 
tree and gloom, to where there was a 
sunlit clearing visible. "In a way I sup- 
pose i\ did," I said. "It stopped us pene- 
trating very deeply because it made us 


scared, because there are few track- 
ways through and the ground is chok- 
ed with stone and briar ... very diffi- 
cult walking. Is that what you meant? 
Or did you mean something a little 
more sinister?" 

"Sinister isn't the word I'd use," 
said Christian, but added nothing 
more for moment; he reached up to 
pluck a leaf from a small immature oak 
and rubbed it between thumb and fore- 
finger before crushing it in his palm. 
All the time he stared into the deep 
woods. "This is primary oak wood- 
land, Steve, untouched forest from 
when all of the country was covered 
with deciduous forests of oak and ash 
and elder and rowan and hawthorn...." 

"And all the rest," I said with a 
smik. "I remember the old man listing 
them for us." 

"That's right, he did. And there's 
more than eight square miles of such 
forest stretching from here to well be- 
yond Grimley, eight square miles of 
original, post-Ice Age forestland. Un- 
touched, uninvaded for thousands of 
years." He broke off and looked at me 
hard, before adding, "Resistant to 
change." 

I said, "He always thought there 
were boars alive in there. I remember 
hearing something one night, and he 
convinced me that it was a great big 
old bull boar, skirting the edge of the 
woods, looking for a mate." 

Christian led the way back towards 
the boathouse. "He was probably 
right. If boars had survived from medi- 


12 


Fantasy & Science Fiction 


eval times, this is just the sort of wood- 
iand they'd be found in." 

With my mind opened to those 
events of years ago, memory inched 
back, images of childhood — the burn- 
ing touch of sun on bramble-grazed 
skin, fishing trips to the millpond, tree 
camps, games, explorations ... and in- 
stantly I recalled the Twigling. 

As we walked back to the beaten 
pathway that led up to the lodge, we 
discussed the sighting. I had been 
about nine or ten years old. On our 
way to the sticklebrook to fish we had 
decided to test out our stick and string 
rods on the millpond, in the vain hope 
of snaring one of the predatory fish 
that lived there. As we crouched by the 
water (we only ever dared go out in the 
boat with Alphonse), we saw move- 
ment in the trees, across on the other 
bank. It was a bewildering vision that 
held us enthralled for the next few mo- 
ments, and not a little terrified: stand- 
ing watching us was a man in brown 
leathery clothes, with a wide, gleaming 
belt around his waist, and a spiky or- 
ange beard that reached to his chest; 
on his head he wore twigs, held to his 
crown by the leather band. He watch- 
ed us for a moment only, before slip- 
ping back into the darkness. We heard 
nothing in all this time, no sound of 
approach, no sound of departure. 

Running back to the house, we had 
soon calmed down. Christian decided, 
eventually, that it must have been old 
Alphonse, playing tricks on us. But 
when I mentioned what we'd seen to 


my father, he reacted almost angrily 
(although Christian recalls him as hav- 
ing been excited, and bellowing for 
that reason, and not because he was 
angry with our having been near the 
forbidden pool). It was father who re- 
ferred to the vision as "the Twigling," 
and soon after we had spoken to him 
he vanished into the woodland for 
nearly two weeks. 

"That was when he came back 
hurt, remember?" We had reached the 
grounds of Oak Lodge, and Christian 
held the gate open for me as he spoke. 

'The arrow wound. The gypsy ar- 
row. My God, that was a bad day." 

"The first of many." 

I noticed that most of the ivy had 
been cleared from the walls of the 
house; it was a grey place now, small, 
curtainless windows set in the dark 
brick, the slate roof, with its three tall 
chimney stacks, partially hidden be- 
hind the branches of a big old beech 
tree. The yard and gardens were unti- 
dy and unkempt, the empty chicken 
coops and animal shelters ramshackle 
and decaying. Christian had really let 
'the place slip. But when I stepped 
across the threshold, it was as if I had 
never been away. The house smelled of 
stale food and chlorine, and I could al- 
most see the thin figure of my mother, 
working away at the immense pine- 
wood table in the kitchen, cats stretch- 
ed out around her on the red-brick 
floor. 

Christian had grown tense again, 
staring at me in that fidgety way that 


Mythago Wood 


marked his unease, ^imagined he was 
still unsure whether to be glad or angry 
that I had come home like this. For a 
moment I felt like an intruder. He said. 
"Why don't you unpack and freshen 
up. You can use your old room. It's a 
bit stuffy, I expect, but it'll soon air. 
Then come down and we'll have some 
late lunch. We've got all the time in the 
world to chat, as long as we're finished 
by tea." He smiled, and I thought this 
was some slight attempt at humor. But 
he went on quickly, staring at me in a 
cold, hard way, "Because if»you're go- 
ing to stay at home for a while, then 
you'd better know what's going on 
here. I don't want you interfering with 
it, Steve, or with what I'm doing." 

"I wouldn't interfere with your life, 
Chris—" 

"Wouldn't you? We'll see. I'm not 
going to deny that I'm nervous of you 
being here. But since you are...." he 
trailed off, and for a second looked al- 
most embarrassed. "Well, we'll have a 
chat later on." 

Intrigued by what Christian had said, 
and worried by his apprehension of 
me, I nonetheless restrained my curios- 
ity and spent an hour exploring the 
house again, from top to bottom, in- 
side and out, everywhere save father's 
study, the contemplation of which 
chilled me more than Christian's be- 
havior had done. Nothing had chang- 
ed, except that it was untidy and un- 
tenanted. Christian had employed a 

14 


part-time cleaner and cook, a good 
soul from a nearby village who cycled 
to the Lodge every week and prepared 
a pie or stew that would last the man 
three days. Christian did not go short 
of farm produce, so much so that he 
rarely bothered to use his ration book. 
He seemed to get all he needed, includ- 
ing sugar and tea, from the Knares- 
thorpe estate, which had always been 
good to my family. 

My own room was dust free but 
quite stale. I opened the window wide 
and lay down on the bed for a few 
minutes, staring out and up into the 
hazy late-summer sky, past the waving 
branches of the gigantic beech that 
grew so close to the lodge. Several 
times, in the years before my teens, I 
had climbed from window to tree and 
made a secret camp among the thick 
branches; by moonlight I had shivered 
in my underpants, crouched in that 
private place, imagining the dcirk do- 
ings of night creatures below. 

Lunch, in midaftemoon, was a sub- 
stantial feast of cold pork, chicken and 
hard-boiled eggs, in quantities that, af- 
ter two years in France on strict ra- 
tions, I had never thought to see again. 
We were , of course, eating his food 
supply for several days, but the fact 
seemed irrelevant to Christian, who at 
any rate only picked at his meal. 

Afterwards we talked for a couple 
of hours, and Christian relaxed quite 
noticeably, although he never referred 
to Guiwenneth or to father's work, 
and I never broached either subject. 

Fantasy & Science Fiction 


We were sprawled in the uncomforta- 
ble armchairs that had belonged to my 
grandparents, surrounded by the time- 
faded mementos of our family . . . pho- 
tographs, a noisy rose-wood clock, 
horrible pictures of exotic Spain, all 
framed in cracked mock-gilded wood, 
and all pressed hard against the same 
floral wallpaper that had hugged the 
walls of the sitting room since a time 
before my birth. But it was home, and 
Christian was home, and the smell, 
and the faded surrounds, all were 
home to me. I knew, within two hours 
of arriving, that I would have to stay. 
It was not so much that I belonged here 
— although I certainly felt that — but 
simply that the place belonged to me, 
not in any mercenary sense of owner- 
ship, more in the way that the house 
and the land around the house shared a 
common life with me; we were part of 
the same evolution; even in France, 
even as far as Greece, where I had been 
in action, I had not been separated 
from that evolution, merely stretched 
to an extreme. 

As the heavy old rose-wood clock 
began to whirr and click, preceding its 
labored chiming of the hour of five, 
Christian abruptly rose from his chair 
and tossed his half-smoked cigarette 
into the empty fire grate. 

"Let's go to the study," he said, and 
I rose without speaking and followed 
him through the house to the small 
room where our father had worked. 
"You're scared of this room, aren't 
you?" he said as he opened the door 


and walked inside, crossing to the 
heavy oak desk and pulling out a large 
leather-bound book from one of the 
drawers, 

I hesitated outside the study, 
watching Christian, almost unable to 
move my legs to carry myself into the 
room. I recognized the book he held, 
my father's notebook. I touched my 
back pocket, the wallet I carried there, 
and thought of the fragment of that 
notebook that was hidden inside the 
thin leather. I wondered if anyone, my 
father or Christian, had ever noticed 
that a page was missing. Christian was 
watching me, his eyes bright with ex- 
citement, now, his hands trembling as 
he placed the book on the desk top. 

"He's dead, Steve. He's gone from 
this room, from the house. There's no 
need to be afraid any more." 

"Isn't there?" 

But I found the sudden strength to 
move and stepped across the thresh- 
old. The moment I entered the musty 
room I felt totally subdued, deeply af- 
fected by the coolness of the place, the 
stark, haunted atmosphere that hugged 
the walls and carpets and windows. It 
smelled slightly of leather, here, and 
dust too, with just a distant hint of pol- 
ish, as if Christian made a token effort 
to keep this stifling room clean. It was 
not a crowded room, not a library as 
my father would have perhaps liked it 
to be. There were books on zoology 
and botany, on history and archaeo- 
logy, but these were not rare copies, 
merely the cheapest copies he could 


Mythago Wood 


15 


find at the time. There were more pa- 
perbacks than stiff-covered books, and 
the exquisite binding of his notes, and 
the deeply varnished desk, had an air 
of Victorian elegance about them that 
belied the otherwise shabby studio. 

On the walls, between the cases of 
books, were his glass-framed speci- 
mens, pieces of wood, collections of 
leaves, crude sketches of animal and 
plant life made during the first years of 
his fascination with the forest. And al- 
most hidden away among the cases 
and the shelves was the patterned shaft 
of the arrow that had struck him fif- 
teen years before, its flights twisted 
and useless, the broken shaft glued to- 
gether, the iron head dulled with 
corrosion, but a lethal-looking weapon 
nonetheless. 

I stared at that arrow for several 
seconds, reliving the man's agony, and 
the tears that Christian and I had wept 
for him as we had helped him back 
from the woodlands, that cold autumn 
afternoon, convinced that he would 
die. 

How quickly things had changed 
after that strange and never fully ex- 
plained incident. If the arrow linked 
me with an earlier day, when some 
semblance of concern and love had re- 
mained in my father's mind, the rest of 
the study radiated only coldness. 

I could still see the greying figure, 
bent over his desk, writing furiously. I 
could hear the troubled breathing, the 
lung disorder that finally killed him; I 
could hear his caught breath, the vo- 


calized sound of irritation as he grew 
aware of my presence and waved me 
away with a half-irritated gesture, as if 
he begrudged even that split second of 
acknowledgement . 

How like him Christian looked 
now, standing there all disheveled and 
sickly looking, and yet with the mark 
of absolute confidence about him, his 
hands in the pockets of his flannels, 
shoulders drooped, his whole body 
visibly shaking. 

He had waited quietly as I adjusted 
to the room and let the memories and 
atmosphere play through me. As I 
stepped up to the desk, my mind back 
on the moment at hand, he said, 
"Steve, you should read the notes. 
They'll make a lot of things clear to 
you and help you.understand what it is 
I'm doing as well." 

I turned the notebook towards me, 
scanning the sprawling untidy hand- 
writing, picking out words and 
phrases, reading through the years of 
my father's life in a few scant seconds. 
The words were as meaningless, on the 
whole, as those oji my purloined sheet. 
To read them brought back a memory 
of anger and of danger, and of fear. 
The life in the notes had sustained me 
through nearly a year of war and had 
come to mean something outside of 
their proper context. I felt reluctant to 
dispel that powerful association with 
the past. 

"I intend to read them, Chris. From 
beginning to end, and that's a promise. 
But not for the moment." 


16 


Fantasy & Science Fiction 


I closed the book, noticing as I did 
that my hands were clammy and trem- 
bling. I was not yet ready to be so close 
to my father again, and Christian saw 
this and accepted it. 

c 

^conversation died quite early that 
night, as my energy expired, and the 
tensions of the long journey finally 
made themselves known to me. Chris- 
tian came up with me and stood in the 
doorway of my room, watching as I 
turned back the sheets and pottered 
about, picking up bits and pieces of my 
past life, laughing, shaking my head 
and trying to evoke a last moment's 
tired nostalgia. "Remember making 
camp out in the beech?" I said, watch- 
ing the grey of branch and leaf against 
the still-bright evening sky. "Yes," said 
Christian with a smile. "Yes, I remem- 
ber very clearly." 

But it was as fatigued as that, and 
Christian took the hint and said, 
"Sleep well, old chap. I'll see you in the 
morning." 

If I slept at all, it was for the first 
two or three hours after putting head 
to pillow. I woke sharply, and bright- 
ly, in the dead of night, one or two 
o'clock, perhaps; the sky was very 
dark now, and it was quite windy out- 
side. I lay and stared at the window, 
wondering how my body could feel so 
fresh, so alert. There was movement 
downstairs, and I guessed that Chris- 
tian was doing some tidying, restlessly 
walking through the house, trying to 


adjust to the idea of me moving in. 

The sheets smelled of mothballs 
and old cotton; the bed creaked in a 
metallic way when I shifted on it, and 
when I lay still, the whole room clicked 
and shuffled, as if adapting itself to its 
first company in so many years. I lay 
awake for ages but must have drifted 
to sleep again before first light, because 
suddenly Christian was bending over 
me, shaking my shoulder gently. 

I started with surprise, awake at 
once, and propped up on my elbows, 
looking around. It was dawn. "What is 
it, Chris?" 

"I've got to go, old boy. I'm sorry, 
but I have to." 

I realized he was wearing a heavy 
oilskin cape and thick-soled walking 
boots on his feet. "Go? What d'you 
mean, go?" 

"I'm sorry, Steve. There's nothing I 
can do about it." He spoke softly, as if 
there were someone else in the house 
who might be woken by raised voices. 
He looked more drawn than ever in 
this pale light, and his eyes were nar- 
rowed, I thought with pain or anxiety. 
"I have to go away for a few days. 
You'll be all right. I've left a list of in- 
structions downstairs, where to get 
bread, eggs, all that sort of thing. I'm 
sure you'll be able to use my ration 
book until yours comes. I shan't be 
long, just a few days. That's a 
promise...." 

He rose from his crouch and walk- 
ed out the door. "For God's sake, 
Chris, where are you going?" 


Mythago Wood 


17 


"Inwards, " was all he said, before I 
heard him clump heavily down the 
stairs. I remained motionless for a mo- 
ment or two, trying to clear my 
thoughts, then rose, put on my dress- 
ing gown and followed him down to 
the kitchen. He had already left the 
house. I went back up to the landing 
window and saw him skirting the edge 
of the yard and walking swiftly down 
towards the south track. He was wear- 
ing a wide-brimmed hat and carrying a 
long black staff; on his back he had a 
small rucksack, slung uncomfortably 
over one shoulder. 

"Where's inwards, Chris?" I said to 
his vanishing figure, and watched long 
after he had disappeared from view. 
"What's going on inside your head?" I 
asked of his empty bedroom as I wan- 
dered restlessly through the house; 
Guiwenneth, I decided in my wisdom, 
her loss, her leaving ... how little one 
could interpret from the words "she's 
gone." And in all our chat of the even- 
ing before he had never alluded to the 
girl again. I had come home to England 
expecting to find a cheerful young cou- 
ple and instead had found a haunted, 
wasting brother living in the derelict 
shadow of our family home. 

By the afternoon I had resigned 
myself to a period of solitary living, 
for wherever Christian had gone (and I 
had a fairly good idea), he had hinted 
clearly that he would be gone for some 
time. There was a lot to do about the 
house and the yard, and there seemed 
no better way to spend my time than in 


beginning to rebuild the personality of 
the house. I made a list of essential re- 
pairs and the following day walked in- 
to the nearest town to order what ma- 
terials I could, mostly wood and paint, 
which I found in reasonable supply. 

I renewed my acquaintance with 
the Knaresthorpe family and with 
many of the local families with whom I 
had once been friendly. I terminated 
the services of the part-time cook; I 
could look after myself quite well 
enough. And I visited the cemetery, a 
single, brief visit, coldly accomplished. 

The month of August turned to 
September, and I noticed a definite 
crispness in the air by evening and ear- 
ly in the morning. It was a season I lov- 
ed, the turn from summer to autumn, 
although it bore with it associations of 
return to school after the long vaca- 
tion, and that was a memory I didn't 
cherish. I soon grew used to being on 
my own in the house, and although I 
took long walks around the deep 
woodlands, watching the road and the 
railway track for Christian's return, I 
had ceased to feel anxious about him 
by the end of my first week home and 
had settled comfortably into a daily 
routine of building in the yard, paint- 
ing the exterior woodwork of the 
house ready for the onslaught of win- 
ter, and digging over the large untend- 
ed garden. 

It was during the evening of my 
eleventh day at home that this domes- 
tic routine was disturbed by a circum- 
stance of such peculiarity that after- 


18 


Fantasy & Science Fiction 


wards I could not sleep for thinking 
about it. 

I had been in the town of Hobb- 
hurst for most of the afternoon and af- 
ter a light evening meal was sitting 
reading the newspaper; towards nine 
o'clock, as I began to feel ready for an 
evening stroll, I thought I heard a dog, 
not so much barking as howling. My 
first thought was that Christian was 
coming back; my second that there 
were no dogs in this immediate area at 
all. 

I went out into the yard; it was 
after dusk but still quite bright, al- 
though the oak woods were melded to- 
gether into a grey-green blur. I called 
for Christian, but there was no re- 
sponse. I was about to return to my pa- 
per when a man stepped out of the dis- 
tant woodland and began to trot to- 
wards me; on a short leather leash he 
was holding the most enormous hound 
I have ever seen. 

At the gate to our private grounds 
he stopped, and the dog began to 
growl; it placed its forepaws on the 
fence and, in so doing, rose almost to 
the height of its master. I felt nervous 
at once, keeping my attention balanced 
between the gaping, panting mouth of 
that dark beast and the strange man 
who held it in check. 

It was difficult to make him out 
clearly, for his face was painted with 
dark patterns and his mustaches 
drooped to well below his chin; his 
hair was plastered thickly about his 
scalp; he wore a dark woollen shirt. 


with a leather jerkin over the top, and 
tight, check-patterned breeches that 
reached to just below his knees. When 
he stepped cautiously through the gate, 
I could see his rough and ready san- 
dals. Across his shoulder he carried a 
crude-looking bow, and a bundle of ar- 
rows, held together with a simple 
thong and tied to his belt. He, like 
Christian, carried a staff. ^ 

Inside the gate he hesitated, watch- 
ing me. The hound was restless beside 
him, licking its mouth and growling 
softly. I had never seen a dog such as 
this, shaggy and dark-furred, with the 
» narrow pointed face of an Alsatian, 
but the body, it seemed to me, of a 
bear; except that its legs were long and 
thin, an animal made for chasing, for 
hunting. 

The man spoke to me, and al- 
though I felt familiar with the words, 
they meant nothing. I didn't know 
what to do. So I shook my head and 
said that I didn't understand. The man 
hesitated just a moment before repeat- 
ing what he had said, this time with a 
distinct edge of anger in his voice. And 
he started to walk towards me, tugging 
at the hound to prevent it straining at 
the leash. The light was draining from 
the sky, and he seemecT to grow in stat- 
ure in the grey ness as he approached. 
The beast watched me, hungrily. 

"What do you want?" I called, and 
tried to sound firm when I would 
rather have run inside the house. The 
man was ten paces away from me. He 
stopped, spoke again and this time 


Mythago Wood 


19 


made eating motions with the hand 
that held his staff. Now I understood. I 
nodded vigorously. ''Wait here," I 
said, and went back to the house to 
fetch the cold joint of pork that was to 
last me four more days. It was not 
large, but it seemed an hospitable thing 
to do. I took this, half a granary loaf, 
and a jug of bottled beer out into the 
yard. The stranger was crouched now, 
the hound lying down beside him, 
rather reluctantly, it seemed to me. As 
I tried to approach them, the dog 
roared in a way that set my heart rac- 
ing and nearly made me drop my gifts. 
The man shouted at the beast and said 
something to me. I placed the food 
where I stood and backed away. The 
gruesome pair approached and again 
squatted down to eat. 

As he picked up the joint, I saw the 
scars on his arm, running down and 
across the bunched muscles. I also 
smelled him, a raw, rancid odor, sweat 
and urine mixed with the fetid aroma 
of rotting meat. I nearly gagged but 
held my ground, watching as the 
stranger tore at the pork with his teeth, 
swallowing hard and fast. The hound 
watched me. 

After a few minutes the man stop- 
ped eating, looked at me, and with his 
gaze fixed on mine, almost challenging 
me to react, passed the rest of the meat 
to the dog, which growled loudly and 
snapped at the joint. The hound chew- 
ed, cracked and gulped the entire piece 
of pork in less than four minutes, while 
the stranger cautiously — and without 

20 


much apparent pleasure — drank beer 
and chewed on a large mouthful of 
bread. 

Finally this bizarre feast was over. 
The man rose to his feet and jerked the 
hound away from where it was licking 
the ground noisily. He said a word I in- 
tuitively recognized as "thankyou." He 
was about to turn when the hound 
scented something; it uttered a high- 
pitched keen, followed by a raucous 
bark, and snatched itself away from its 
master's restraining grip, racing across 
the yard to a spot between the ram- 
shackle chicken houses. Here it sniffed 
and scratched until its master reached 
if, grabbed the leather leash, and 
shouted angrily and lengthily at his 
charge. The hound moved with him, 
padding silently and monstrously into 
the gloom beyond the yard. The last I 
saw of them they were running at full 
speed, around the edge of the wood- 
land, towards the farmlands around 
the village of Grimley. 

In the morning the place where 
man and beast had rested still smelled 
rank. I skirted the area quickly as I 
walked to the woods and found the 
place where my strange visitors had ex- 
ited from the trees; it was trampled and 
broken, and I followed the line of their 
passage for some yards into the shade 
before stopping and turning back. 

Where on earth had they come 
from? Had the war had such an effect 
on men in England that some had re- 
turned to the wild, using bow and ar- 
row and hunting dog for survival? 

Fantasy & Science Fiction 


Not until midday did I think to 
look between the chicken huts, at the 
ground so deeply scored by that brief 
moment's digging. What had the beast 
scented, I wondered, and a sudden 
chill clawed at my heart. I left the place 
at a run, unwilling, for the moment, to 
confirm my worst fears. 

How 1 knew I cannot say; intui- 
tion, or perhaps something that my 
subconscious had detected in Chris- 
tian's words and mannerisms the week 
or so before, during our brief encoun- 
ter. In any event, late in the afternoon 
that same day 1 took a spade to the 
chicken huts and within a few minutes 
of digging had proved my instinct 
right. 

It took me half an hour of sitting on 
the back doorstep of the house, staring 
across the yard at the grave, to find the 
courage to uncover the woman's body 
totally. I was dizzy, slightly sick, but 
most of all I was shaking; an uncon- 
trollable, unwelcome, shaking of arms 
and legs so pronounced that I could 
hardly pull on a pair of gloves. But 
eventually I knelt by the hole and 
brushed the rest of the dirt from the 
girl's body. 

Christian had buried her three feet 
deep, face down; her hair was long and 
red; her body was still clad in a strange 
green garment, a patterned tunic that 
was laced at the sides and, though it 
was crushed up almost to her waist 
now, would have reached to her 
calves. A stzdf was buried with her. I 
turned the head, holding my breath 


against the almost intolerable smell of 
putrefaction, and with a little effort 
could gaze upon the withering face. I 
saw then how she had died, for the 
head and stump of the arrow were still 
embedded in her eye. Had Christian 
tried to withdraw the weapon and suc- 
ceeded only in breaking it? There was 
enough of the shaft left for me to 
notice that it had the same carved 
markings as the arrow in my father's 
study. 

Poor Guiwenneth, I thought, and 
let the corpse drop back to its resting 
place. I filled in the dirt again. When I 
Reached the house I was cold with 
sweat and in no doubt that I was about 
to be violently sick. 

T 

I wo days later, when I came down in 
the morning, I found the kitchen litter- 
ed with Christian's clothes and effects, 
the floor covered with mud and leaf lit- 
ter, the whole place smelling unpleas- 
ant. I crept upstairs to his room and 
stared at his semi-naked body; he was 
belly down on the bed, face turned to- 
wards me, sleeping soundly and noisi- 
ly, and I imagined that he was sleeping 
enough for a week. The state of his 
body, though, gave me cause for con- 
cern. He was scratched and scarred 
from neck to ankle, and filthy, and 
malodorous to an extreme. His hair 
was matted with dirt. And yet, about 
him there was something hardened and 
strong, a tangible physical change 
from the hollow-faced, rather skeletal 


Mythago Wood 


21 


young man who had greeted me nearly 
two weeks before. 

He slept for most of the day, 
emerging at six in the evening wearing 
a loose-fitting grey shirt and flannels, 
tom off just above the knee. He had 
half-heartedly washed his face, but still 
reeked of sweat and vegetation, as if he 
had spent the days away buried in 
compost. 

I fed him, and he drank the entire 
contents of a pot of tea as I sat watch- 
ing him; he kept darting glances at me, 
suspicious little looks as if he were 
nervous of some sudden move or sur- 
prise attack upon him. The muscles of 
his arms and wrists were pronounced. 
This was almost a different man. 

"Where have you been, Chris?" I 
asked after a while, and was not at all 
surprised when he answered, "In the 
woods, old boy. Deep in the woods." 
He stuffed more meat into his mouth 
and chewed noisily. As he swallowed 
he found a moment to say, "Fm quite 
fit. Bmised and scratched by the damn- 
ed brambles, but quite fit." 

In the woods. Deep in the woods. 
What in heavens name could he have 
been doing there? As I watched him 
wolf down his food, I saw again the 
stranger, crouching like an animal in 
my yard, chewing on meat as if he 
were some wild beast. Christian re- 
minded me of that man. There was the 
same air of the primitive about him. 

'Tou need a bath rather badly," I 
said, and he grinned and made a sound 
of affirmation. "What have you been 


doing, Chris? In the woods. Have you 
been camping?" 

He swallowed noisily and drank 
half a cup of tea before shaking his 
head. "I have a camp there, but Tve 
been searching, walking as deep as I 
could get. But I still can't get 
beyond...." He broke off and glanced 
at me, a questioning look in his eyes. 
"Did you read the old man's note- 
book?" 

1 said that 1 hadn't. In truth, I had 
been so surprised by his abrupt depar- 
ture and so committed to getting the 
house back into some sort of shape that 
I had forgotten all about father's notes 
on his work. And even as I said this, I 
wondered if the truth of the matter was 
that I had put father, his work and his 
notes, as far from my mind as possible, 
as if they were specters whose haunting 
would reduce my resolve to go for- 
ward. 

Christian wiped his hand across his 
mouth and stared at his empty plate. 
He suddenly sniffed himself and laugh- 
ed. "By the Gods, I do stink. You'd 
better boil me up some water, Steve. 
I'll wash right now." 

But I didn't move. Instead I stared 
across the wooden table at him; he 
caught my gaze and frowned. "What is 
it? What's on your mind?" 

"I found her, Chris. I found her 
body. Guiwenneth. I found where you 
buried her." 

I don't know what reacion I expect- 
ed from Christian. Anger, perhaps, or 
panic, or a sudden babbling burst of 


22 


Fantasy & Science Fiction 


explanation. I half hoped he would re- 
act with puzzlement, that the corpse in 
the yard would turn out not to be the 
remains of his wife and that he had had 
no involvement with its burial. But 
Christian knew about the body. He 
stared at me blankly, and a heavy, 
sweaty silence made me grow uncom- 
fortable. ‘ 

Suddenly I realized that Christian 
was crying, his gaze unwavering from 
my own, but moistened, now, by the 
great flood of tears through the re- 
maining grime on his face. And yet he 
made no sound, and his face never 
changed its expression from that of 
bland, almost blind contemplation. 

"Who shot her, Chris?" I asked 
quietly. "Did you?" 

"Not me," he said, and with the 
words his tears stopped, and his gaze 
dropped to the table. "She was shot by 
a mythago. There was nothing I could 
do about it." 

Mythago? The meaning was alien 
to me, although I recognized the word 
from the scrap of my father's notebook 
that I carried. I queried it, and Chris 
rose from the table but rested his hands 
upon it as he watched me. "A myth- 
ago," he repeated. "It's still in the 
woods ... they all are. That's where 
I've been, seeking among them. I tried 
to save her, Steve. She was alive when 
I found her, and she might have stayed 
alive, but I brought her out of the 
woods ... in a way, I did kill her. I took 
her away from the vortex, and she died 
quite quickly. I panicked, then. I didn't 


know what to do. I buried her because 
it seemed the easiest way out...." 

"Did you tell the police? Did you 
report her death?" 

Christian grinned, but it was not 
with any morbid humor. It was a 
knowing grin, a response to some se- 
cret that he had not yet shared; and yet 
the grin was merely a defense, for it 
faded rapidly. "Not necessary Steve.... 
The police would not have been inter- 
ested." 

I rose angrily from the table. It 
seemed to me that Christian was be- 
having, and had behaved, with appall- 
ing irreseponsibility. "Her family, 
Chris ... her parentsi They have a right 
to know." 

And Christian laughed. 

I felt the blood rise in my face. "I 
don't see anything to laugh at." 

He sobered instantly, looked at me 
almost abashed. "You're right. I'm 
sorry. You don't understand, and it's 
time you did. Steve, she had no par- 
ents because she had no life, no real 
life. She's lived a thousand times, and 
she's never lived at all. But I still fell in 
love with her ... and I shall find her 
again in the woods; she's in there 
somewhere...." 

Had he gone mad? His words were 
the unreasoned babblings of one in- 
sane, and yet something about his 
eyes, something about his demeanor, 
told me that it was not so much insani- 
ty as obsession. But obsession with 
what? 

"You must read the old man's 


Mythago Wood 


23 


notes, Steve. Don't put it off any 
longer. They will tell you about the 
wood, about what's going on in there*. 
I mean it. I'm neither mad nor callous. 
I'm just trapped, and before I go away 
again. I'd like you to know why, and 
how, and where I'm going. Perhaps 
you'll be able to help me. Who knows? 
Read the book. And then we'll talk. 
And when you know what our dear 
departed father managed to do, then 
I'm afraid I have to take my leave of 
you again." 

T 

I here is one entry in my father's 
notebook that seems to mark a turning 
point in his research, and in his life. It 
is a longer entry than the rest of that 
particular time and follows an absence 
of seven months from the pages. While 
his entries are detailed, he could not be 
described as having been a dedicated 
diarist, and the style varies from clip- 
ped notes to fluent description. (I dis- 
covered, too, that he himself had tom 
many pages from the thick book, thus 
concealing my minor crime quite effec- 
tively. Christian had never noticed the 
missing page.) On the whole, he seems 
to have used the notebook and the 
quiet hours of recording as a way of 
conversing with himself — a means of 
clarification of his own thoughts. 

The entry in question is dated Sep- 
tember, 1933, and was written shortly 
after our encounter with the Twigling. 
After reading the entry for the first 
time, I thought back to that year and 


realized 1 had been just nine years old. 

"Wynne-Jones arrived after dawn. 
Walked together along the south track, 
checking the flux-drains for sign of 
mythago activity. Back to the house 
quite shortly after — no one about, 
which suited my mood. A crisp, dry 
autumn day. Like last year, images of 
the Urscumug are strongest as the 
season changes. Perhaps he senses 
autumn, the dying of the green. He 
comes forward, and the oak woods 
whisper to him. He must be close to 
genesis. Wynne-Jones thinks a further 
time of isolation needed, and it must be 
done. Jennifer already concerned and 
distraught by my absences. I feel help- 
less — can't speak to her. Must do 
what is needed. 

"Yesterday the boys glimpsed the 
Twigling. I had thought him resorbed 
— clearly the resonance stronger than 
we had believed. He seems to frequent 
woodland edge, which is to be expect- 
ed. I have seen him along the track sev- 
eral times, but not for a year or so. The 
persistence is worrying. Both boys 
clearly disturbed by the sighting; Chris- 
tian less emotional. I suspect it mesmt 
little to him, a poacher perhaps, or lo- 
cal man taking short cut to Grimley. 
Wynne-Jones suggests we go back into 
woods and call the Twigling deep, per- 
haps to the hogback glade where he 
might remain in strong oak-vortex and 
eventually fade. But I know that pene- 
trating into deep woodland will in- 
volve more than a week's absence, and 
poor Jennifer already deeply depressed 


24 


Fantasy & Science Fiction 


by my behavior. Cannot explain it to 
her, though I dearly want to. Do not 
want the children involved in this, and 
it worries me that they have now twice 
seen a mythago. I have invented magic 
forest creatures — stories for them. 
Hope'lhey will associate what they see 
with products of their own imagina- 
tions. But must be careful. Until it is re- 
solved, until the Urscumug mythago 
forms must not let any but Wynne- 
Jones know of what I have discovered. 
The completeness of tKe resurrection 
essential. The Urscumug is the most 
powerful because he is the primary. I 
know for certain that the oak woods 
will contain him, but others might be 
frightened of the power they would 
certainly be able to feel, and end it for 
everyone. Dread to think what would 
happen if these forests were destroyed, 
and yet they cannot survive forever. 

'Today's training with Wynne- 
Jones: test pattern 26:iii, shallow hyp- 
nosis, green light environment. As the 
frontal bridge reached sixty volts, de- 
spite the pain the flow across my skull 
was the most powerful I have ever 
known. Am now totally convinced 
that each half of the brain functions in 
a slightly different way and that the 
hidden awareness is located on the 
right-hand side. It has been lost for so 
long! The Wynne-Jones bridge enables 
a superficial communion between the 
fields around each hemisphere, and the 
zone of the pre-mythago is excited ac- 
cordingly. If only there were some way 
of exploring the living brain to find ex- 


actly where the site of this occult pres- 
ence lies. 

"The forms of the mythagos cluster 
in my peripheral vision, still. Why 
never in fore-vision? These unreal im- 
ages are mere reflections, after all. The 
form of Hood was subtly different — 
more brown than green, the face less 
friendly, more haunted, drawn. This is 
certainly because earlier images (even 
the Hood mythago that actually form- 
ed in the woodland, two years ago) 
were affected by my own confused 
childhood images of the greenwood 
and the merry band. But now, evoca- 
tion of the pre-mythago is more 
powerful, reaches to the basic form, 
without interference. The Arthur form 
was more real as well, and I glimpsed 
the various marshland forms from the 
latter part of the first millennium AD. 
Wynne-Jones would love me to ex- 
plore these folk heroes, unrecorded 
and unknown, but I am anxious to find 
the primary image. 

"The Urscumug formed in my mind 
in the clearest form I have ever seen 
him. Hints of the Twigling in form, but 
he is much more ancient, far bigger. 
Decks himself with wood and leaves, 
on top of animal hides. Face seems 
smeared with white clay, forming a 
mask upon the exaggerated features 
below; but it is hard to see the face 
clearly. A mask upon a mask? The hair 
a mass of stiff and spiky points; gnarl- 
ed hawthorn branches are driven up 
through the matted hair, giving a most 
bizarre appearance. I believe he carries 


Mythago Wood 


25 


a spear, with a wide stone blade ... an 
angry looking weapon, but again, hard 
to see, always just out of focus. He is 
so old, this primary image, that he is 
fading from the human mind, and in 
any event is touched with confusion, 
the overassertion of later cultural inter- 
pretation of his appearance ... a hint of 
bronze particularly, mostly about the 
arms (torques). I suspect that the leg- 
end of the Urscumug was powerful 
enough to carry through all the neo- 
lithic and on into the second millenni- 
um BC, perhaps even later. Wynne- 
Jones thinks the Urscumug may pre- 
date even the neolithic. 

''Essential, now, to spend time in 
the forest, to allow the vortex to inter- 
act with me and form the mythago. I 
intend to leave the house within the 
next week." 

Without commenting on the 
strange, confusing passage that I had 
read, I turned the pages of the diary 
and read entries here and there. I could 
clearly recall that autumn in 1933, the 
time when my father had packed a 
large rucksack and wandered into the 
woods, walking swiftly away from my 
mother's hysterical shouting, and 
flanked by his diminutive scientist 
friend (a sour-faced man who never ac- 
knowledged anyone but my father and 
who seemed embarrassed to be in the 
house when he came to visit). Mother 
had not spoken for the rest of the day, 
and she did nothing but sit in her bed- 
room and occasionally weep. Christian 
and I had become so distraught by her 


behavior that in the late afternoon we 
had penetrated the oakwoods as deep- 
ly as we dared, calling for our father, 
and finally panicking at the gloomy si- 
lence and the loud, sudden sounds that 
disturbed it. He had returned weeks 
later, disheveled and stinking like a 
tramp. The entry in his notebook, a 
few days later, is a short and bitter ac- 
count of failure. Nothing had happen- 
ed. A single, rather rambling para- 
graph caught my attention. 

"The mythogenetic process is not 
only complex, it is reluctant. My mind 
is not at rest and, as Wynne-Jones has 
explained, it is likely that my human 
considerations, my worries, form an 
effective barrier between the two 
mythopoetic energy flows in my cortex 
— the form from the right brain, the 
reality from the left. The pre-mythago 
zone is not sufficiently enriched by my 
own life force for it to interact in the 
oak vortex. I fear too that the natural 
disappearance of so much life from the 
forest is affecting the interface. The 
boars are there. I'm sure. But perhaps 
the life number is critical. I estimate no 
more than forty, moving within the 
spiral vortex bounded by the ashwood 
intrusions into the oak circle. There are 
no deer, no wolves, although the most 
important animal, the hare, frequents 
^the woodland edge in profusion. But 
perhaps the absence of so much that 
had once lived here has thrown the bal- 
ance of the formula. And yet, through 
the primary existence of these woods, 
life was changing. By the thirteenth 


26 


* Fantasy & Science Fiction 


century there was much botanical life 
that was alien to the 'ley matrix' in 
places where the mythagos still form- 
ed. The form of the myth-men 
changes, adapts, and it is the later 
forms that generate easiest. Hood is 
back — like all the Jack in the Greens, 
is a nuisance, and several times moved 
into the ridge zone around the hogback 
glade. He shot at me, and this is be- 
coming a cause of great concern I But I 
cannot enrich the oak vortex sufficient- 
ly with the pre-mythago of the Urscu- 
mug. What is the answer? Perhaps the 
memory is too far gone, too deep in the 
silent zones of the brain, now, to touch 
the trees." 

Christian saw me frown as I read 
through this tumble of words and im- 
ages. Hood? Robin Hood? And some- 
one — this Hood — shooting at my 
father in the woods? I glanced around 
the study and saw the iron-tipped ar- 
row in its long, narrow glass case, 
mounted above the display of wood- 
land butterflies. Christian was turning 
the pages of the notebook, having 
watched me read in silence for the bet- 
ter part of an hour. He was perched on 
the desk; I sat in father s chair. 

"What's all this about, Chris? It 
reads as if he were actually trying to 
create copies of storybook heroes." 

"Not copies, Steve. The real thing. 
There. Last bit of reading for the mo- 
ment, then I'll go through it with you 
in layman's terms." 

It was an earlier entry, not dated by 
year, only by day and month, al- 


though it was clearly from some years 
before the 1933 recording. 

"I call those particular times 
'cultural interfaces'; they form zones, 
bounded in space, of course, by the 
limits of the country, but bounded also 
in time, a few years, a decade or so, 
when the two cultures — that of the in- 
vaded and the invader — are in a high- 
ly anguished state. The mythagos grow 
from the power of hate, and fear, and 
form in the natural woodlands from 
which they can either emerge — such 
as the Arthur, or Artorius form, the 
bear-like man with his charismatic 
leadership — or remain in the natural 
landscape, establishing a hidden focus 
of hope — the Robin Hood form, per- 
haps Hereward, and of course the 
hero-form I call the Twigling, harass- 
ing the Romans in so many parts of the 
country. I imagine that it is the com- 
bined emotion of the two races that 
draws out the mythago, but it clearly 
sides with that culture whose roots are 
longest established in what I agree 
could be a sort of ley matrix; thus, Ar- 
thur forms and helps the Britons 
against the Saxons, but later Hood is 
created to help the Saxons against the 
Norman invader." 

I drew back from the book, shaking 
my head. The expressions were confus- 
ing, bemusing. Christian grinned as he 
took the notebook and weighed it in 
his hands. "Years of his life, Steve, but 
his concern with keeping detailed re- 
cords was not everything it might have 
been. He records nothing for years, 


Mythago Wood 


27 


then writes every day for a month/' 

"I need a drink of something. And a 
few definitions/' 

We walked from the study, Chris- 
tian carrying the notebook. As we 
passed the framed arrow, I peered 
closely at it. "Is he saying that the real 
Robin Hood shot that into him? And 
killed Guiwenneth too?" 

"It depends," said Christian 
thoughtfully, "on what you mean by 
real. Hood came to that oak forest and 
may still be there. I think he is. As you 
have obviously noticed, he was there 
four months ago when he shot Gui- 
wenneth. But there were many Robin 
Hoods, and all were as real or unreal as 
each other, created by the Saxon peas- 
ants during their time of repression by 
the Norman invader." 

"I don't comprehend this at all, 
Chris — but what's a 'ley matrix'? 
What's an 'oak vortex'? Does it mean 
anything?" 

As we sipped scotch and water in 
the sitting room, watching the dusk 
draw closer, the yard beyond the win- 
dow greying into a place of featureless 
shapes, Christian explained how a man 
called Alfred Watkins had visited our 
father on several occasions and shown 
him on a map of the country how 
straight lines connected places of spirit- 
ual or ancient power — the barrows, 
stones and churches of three different 
cultures. These lines he called leys and 
believed that they existed as a form of 
earth energy running below the 
ground, but influencing that which 


stood upon it. My father had thought 
about leys, and apparently tried to 
measure the energy in the ground be- 
low the forest, but without success. 
And yet he had measured something'm 
the oak woods — an energy associated 
with all the life that grew there. He had 
found a spiral vortex around each tree, 
a sort of aura, and those spirals bound- 
ed not just trees, but whole stands of 
trees and glades. Over the years he had 
mapped the forest. Christian brought 
out that map of the woodland area, 
and I looked at it again, but from a dif- 
ferent point of view, beginning to un- 
derstand the marks made upon it by 
the man who had spent so much time 
within the territories it depicted. Cir- 
cles within circles were marked, cross- 
ed and skirted by straight lines, some 
of which were associated with the two 
pathways we called south and deep 
track. The letters HB in the middle of 
the vast acreage of forest were clearly 
meant to refer to the "Hogback" glade 
that existed there, a clearing that nei- 
ther Christian nor I had ever been able 
to find. There were zones marked out 
as "spiral oak," "dead ash zone" and 
"oscillating traverse." - 

"The old man believed that all life 
is surrounded by an energetic aura — 
you can see the human aura as a faint 
glow in certaii^ light. In these ancient 
woodlands, primary woodlands, the 
combined aura forms something far 
more powerful, a sort of creative field 
that can interact with our unconscious. 
And it's in that unconscious that we 


28 


Fantasy & Science Fiction 


carry what he calls the pre-mythago — 
that's myth imago, the image of the 
idealized form of a myth creature. This 
takes on substance in a natural envi- 
ronment, solid flesh, blood, clothing, 
and — as you saw — weaponry. The 
form of the idealized myth, the hero 
figure, alters with cultural changes, as- 
suming the identity and technology of 
the time. When one culture invades 
another — according to father's theory 
— the heroes are made manifest, and 
not just in one location! Historians and 
legend seekers argue about where Ar- 
thur of the Britons, and Robin Hood 
really lived and fought and don't 
realize that they lived in many sites. 
And another important fact to remem- 
ber is that when the pre-mythago 
forms, it forms in the whole popula- 
tion . . . and when it is no longer need- 
ed, it remains in our collective uncon- 
scious and is transmitted through the 
generations." 

"And the changing form of the 
mythago," I said, to see if I had under- 
stood my sketchy reading of father's 
notes, "is based on an archetype, an ar- 
chaic primary image which father call- 
ed the Urscumug and from which all 
later forms come. And he tried to raise 
the Urscumug from his own uncon- 
scious mind...." 

"And failed to do so," said Chris- 
tian, "although not for want of trying. 
The effort killed him. It weakened him 
so much that his body couldn't take 
the pace. But he certainly seems to 
have created several of the more recent 


adaptations of the Urscumug." 

There were so many questions, so 
many areas that begged for clarifica- 
tion. One above all: "But a thousand 
years ago, if I understand the notes 
correctly, there was a country- wide 
need of the hero, the legendary figure, 
acting for the side of Right. How can 
one man capture such a passionate 
mood? How did he power the interac- 
tion? Surely not from the simple family 
anguish he caused among us, and in his 
own head. As he said, that created an 
unsettled mind and he couldp't func- 
tion properly." 

"If there's an answer," said Chris- 
tian calmly, "it's to be found in the 
woodland area, perhaps in the hog- 
back glade. The old man wrote in his 
notes of the need for a period of soli- 
tary existence, a period of meditation. 
For a year, now. I've been following 
his example directly. He invented a 
sort of electrical bridge which seems to 
fuse elements from each half of the 
brain. I've used his equipment a great 
deal, with and without him. But I al- 
ready find images — the pre-mythagos 
— forming in my peripheral vision 
without the complicated program that 
he used. He was the pioneer; his own 
interaction with the wood has made it 
easier for those who come after. He 
achieved a certain success; I intend to 
complete his work, eventually. I shall 
raise the Urscumug, this hero of the 
first men." 

"To what end, Chris?" I asked 
quietly, and in all truth could not see a 


Mythago Wood 


29 


reason for so tampering with the an- 
cient forces that inhabited both wood- 
land and human spirit. Christian was 
clearly obsessed with the idea of rais- 
ing these dead forms, of finishing 
something the old man had begun. But 
in reading his notebook, and in my 
conversation with Christian, I had not 
heard a single word that explained why 
so bizarre a state of nature should be so 
important to the ones who studied it. 

Christian had an answer. And as he 
spoke to me his voice was hollow, the 
mark of his uncertainty, the stigma of 
his lacking conviction in the truth of 
what he said. "Why, to study the earli- 
est times of man, Steve. From these 
mythagos we can learn so much of 
how it was and how it was hoped to 
be. The aspirations, the visions, the 
cultural identity of a time so far gone 
that even its stone monuments are in- 
comprehensible to us. To learn. To 
communicate through those persistent 
images of our past that are locked in 
each and every one of us." 

He stopped speaking, and there 
was the briefest of silence, interrupted 
only by the heavy rhythmic sound of 
the clock. I said, "I'm not convinced, 
Chris." For a moment I thought he 
would shout his anger; his face flush- 
ed, his whole body tensed up, furious 
with my calm dismissal of his script. 
But the fire softened, and he frowned, 
staring at me almost helplessly. "What 
does that mean?" 

"Nice sounding words; no convic- 
tion." 


After a second he seemed to ac- 
knowledge some truth in what I said. 
"Perhaps my conviction has gone, 
then, buried beneath ... beneath the 
other thing. Guiwenneth. She's be- 
come my main reason for going back 
now." 

I remembered his callous words of 
a while ago, about how she had no life 
yet a thousand lives. I understood in- 
stantly and wondered how so obvious 
a fact could have remained so dogged- 
ly elusive to me. "She was a mythago 
herself," I said. "I understand now." 

"She was my father's mythago, a 
girl from Roman times, a manifestation 
of the Earth Goddess, the young warri- 
or princess who can unite the tribes. I 
can find no recorded legends about 
her, but she is associated with the oral 
tradition, with the Celtic tradition of 
keeping a name silent. She was a pow- 
erful woman, and led — in all her ap- 
pearances — a powerful resistance to- 
the Romans...." 

"Like Queen Boadicea." 

"Before and after that uprising. 
Legends of Guiwenneth inspired many 
tribes to take offensive action against 
the invader." His gaze became distant 
for a moment. "And then she was 
formed in this wood, and I found her 
and came to love her. She was not vio- 
lent, perhaps because the old man him- 
self could not think of a woman being 
violent. He imposed a structure on her, 
disarming her, leaving her quite help- 
less in the forest." 

"How long did you know her?" I 


30 


Fantasy & Science Fiction 


asked, and he shrugged. 

"I can't tell, Steve. How long have I 
been away?" 

"Twelve days or so." 

"As long as that?" He seemed sur- 
prised. "I thought no more than three. 
Perhaps I knew her for many months, 
then, but it seems no time at all. I lived 
in the forest with her, trying to under- 
stand her language, trying to teach her 
mine, speaking with signs and yet al- 
ways able to talk quite deeply. But the 
old man pursued us right to the heart- 
woods, right to the end. He wouldn't 
let up — she was his girl, and he had 
been as struck by her as had I. I found 
him, one day, exhausted and terrified, 
half buried by leaves at the forest edge. 
1 took him home and he was dead 
within the month. That's what I meant 
by his having had a reason for attack- 
ing me. I took Guiwenneth from him." 

"And then she was taken from you. 
Shot dead." 

"A few months later, yes. I became 
a little too happy, a little too content. I 
wrote to you because I had to tell 
someone about her . . . clearly that was 
too much for fate. Two days later I 
found her in a glade, dying. She might 
have lived if I could have got help to 
her in the forest, and left her there. I 
carried her out of the wood, though, 
and she died." He stared at me and the 
expression of sadness hardened to one 
of resolve. "But when I'm back in the 
wood, her myth image in my own sub- 
conscious has a chance of being formed 
... she might be a little tougher than 


my father s version, but I can find her 
again, Steve, if I look hard, if I can find 
that energy you asked about, if I can 
get into the deepest part of the wood, 
to that central vortex...." 

I looked at the map again, at the 
spiral field around the hogback glade. 
"What's the problem? Can't you find 
it?" 

"It's well defended. 1 get near it, but 
I can't ever get beyond the field that's 
about two hundred yards around it. I 
find myself walking in elaborate circles 
even though I'm convinced I've walked 
straight. I can't get in, and whatever's 
in there can't get out. All the mythagos 
are tied to their genesis zones, although 
the Twigling, and Guiwenneth too, 
could get to the very edge of the forest, 
down by the pool." 

But that wasn't truel And I'd spent 
a shaky night to prove it. I said, "One 
of the mythagos has come out of the 
wood ... a tall man with the most un- 
believably terrifying hound. He came 
into the yard and ate a leg of pork." 

Christian looked stunned. "A 
mythago? Are you sure?" 

"Well, no. I had no idea at all what 
he was until now. But he stank, was 
filthy, had obviously lived in the 
woods for months, spoke a strange 
language, carried a bow and 
arrows...." 

"And ran with a hunting dog. Yes, 
of course. It's a late Bronze Age, early 
Iron Age image, very widespread. The 
Irish have taken him to their own with 
Cuchulainn, made a big hero out of 


Mythago Wood 


31 


him, but he's one of the most powerful of 
the myth images, recognizable all across 
Europe." Christian frowned then. "I 
don't understand ... a year ago I saw him 
and avoided him, but he was fading fast, 
decaying ... it happens to them after a 
while. Something must have fed the 
mythago, strengthened it...." 

"Some one, Chris." 

"But who?" It dawned on him then, 
and his eyes widened slightly. "My 
God. Me. From my own mind. It took 
the old man years, and I thought it 
would take me a lot longer, many more 
months in the woodlands, much more 
isolation. But it's started already, my 
own interaction with the vortex...." 

He had gone quite pale, and he 
walked to where his staff was propped 
against the wall, picked it up and 
weighed it in his hands. He stared at it, 
touched the markings upon it. 

"You know what this means," he 
said quietly, and, before I could an- 
swer, went on, "She'll form. She'll 
come back, my Guiwenneth. She may 
be back already." 

"Don't go rushing off again, Chris. 
Wait a while; rest." 

He placed his staff against the wall 
again. "I don't dare. If she has formed 
by now, she's in danger. I have to go 
back." He looked at me and smiled 
thinly, apologetically. "Sony brother. 
Not much of a homecoming for you." 

A 

/ % s quickly as this, after the briefest 
of reunions, I had lost Christian again. 


He was in no mood to talk, too dis- 
tracted by the thought of Guiwenneth 
alone and trapped in the forest to allow 
me much of an insight into his plans 
and into his hopes and fears for some 
resolution to their impossible love af- 
fair. 

I wandered through the kitchen 
and the rest of the house as he gathered 
his provisions together. Again and 
again he assured me that he would be 
gone for no more than a week, perhaps 
two. If she was in the wood, he would 
have found her by that time; if not, 
then he would return and wait awhile 
before going back to the deep zones 
and trying to form her mythago. In a 
year, he said, many of the more hostile 
mythagos would have faded into non- 
existence, and she would be safer. His 
thoughts were confused, his plan that 
he would strengthen her to allow her 
the same freedom as the man and the 
hound did not seem supportable on the 
evidence from our father's notes; but 
Christian was a determined man. If 
one mythago could escape, then so 
could the one he loved. 

One idea that appealed to him was 
that I should come with him as far as 
the glade where we had made camp as 
children, and pitch a tent there. This 
could be a regular rendezvous for us, he 
said, and it would keep his time-sense 
on the right track. And if I spent time in 
the forest, I might encounter other 
mythagos and could report on their 
state. The glade he had in mind was at 
the edge of the wood, and quite safe. 


32 


Fantasy & Science Fiction 


When I expressed concern that my 
own mind would begin to produce 
niythagos, he assured me that it would 
take months for the first pre-mythago 
activity to show up as a haunting pres- 
ence at the edge of my vision. He was 
equally blunt in saying that, if I stayed 
in the area for too long, I would cer- 
tairUy start to relate to the woodland, 
whose aura — he thought — had 
spread more towards the house in the 
last few years. 

Late the following morning we set 
off along the south track. A pale yel- 
low sun hung high above the forest. It 
was a cool, bright day, the air full of 
the scent of smoke, drifting from the 
distant farm where the stubbly remains 
of the summer harvest were being 
burned. We walked in silence until we 
came to the millpond; I had assumed 
Christian would enter the oak wood- 
land here, but wisely he decided 
against it; not so much because of the 
strange movements we had seen there 
as children, but because of the marshy 
conditions. Instead, we walked on un- 
til the woodland bordering the track 
thinned. Here Christian turned off the 
path. 

I followed him inwards, seeking the 
easiest route between tangles of brack- 
en and nettles, enjoying the heavy still- 
ness. The trees were small, here at the 
edge, but within a hundred yards they 
began to show their real age, great 
gnarled oakwood trunks, hollow and 
half-dead, twisting up from the 
ground, almost groaning beneath the 
• 

Mythago Wood 


weight of their branches. The ground 
rose slightly, and the tangled under- 
growth was broken by weathered, li- 
chen-covered stubs of grey limestone; 
we passed over the crest, and the earth 
dipped sharply down, and a subtle 
change came over the woodland; it 
seemed darker, somehow, more alive, 
and I noticed that the shrill September 
bird-sound of the forest edge was re- 
placed here by a more sporadic, 
mournful song. 

Christian beat his way through 
bramble, thickets, and I trudged weari- 
ly after, and we soon came to the large 
glade where, years before, we had 
made our camp. One particularly large 
oak tree dominated the surrounds, and 
we laughed as we traced the faded ini- 
tials we had once carved there. In its 
branches we had made our lookout 
tower, but we had seen very little from 
that leafy vantage point. 

"'Do I look the part?" asked Chris- 
tian, holding his arms out, and I grin- 
ned as I surveyed his caped figure, the 
rune-inscribed staff looking less odd 
now, more functional. 

'Tou look like something. Quite 
what, I don't know." 

He glanced around the clearing. 
"I'll do my best to get back here as of- 
ten as I can. If anything goes wrong. 
I'll try and leave a message if I can't 
find you, some mark to let you 
know...." 

"Nothing's going to go wrong," I 
said with a smile. It was clear that he 
didn't wish me to accompany him be- 

33 


yond this glade, and that suited me. I 
felt a chill, an odd tingle, a sense of be- 
ing watched. Christian noticed my dis- 
comfort and admitted that he felt it 
too, the presence' of the wood, the gen- 
tle breathing of the trees. 

We shook hands, then embraced 
awkwardly, and he turned on his heels 
and paced off into the gloom. I watch- 
ed him go, then listened, and only 
when all sound had gone did I set 
about pitching the small tent. 

For most of September the weather 
remained cool and dry, a dull sort of 
month, that enabled me to drift 
through the days in a very low-key 
state. I worked on the house, read 
some more of father's notebook (but 
quickly tired of the repetitive images 
and thoughts) and with decreasing fre- 
quency walked into the woodlands 
and sat near, or in the tent, listening 
for Christian, cursing the midges that 
haunted the place, and watching for 
any hint of movement. 

With October came rain and the 
abrupt, almost startling realization 
that Christian had been gone for nearly 
a month. The time had slipped by, and 
instead of feeling concerned for him I 
had merely assumed that he knew 
what he was doing and would return 
when he was quite ready. But he had 
been absent for weeks without even 
the slightest sign I He could surely have 
come back to the glade once and left 
some mark of his passing. 

Now I began to feel more concern 
for his safety than perhaps was war- 


ranted. As soon as the rain stoppjed, 1 
trudged back through the forest and 
waited out the rest of the day in the 
miserable, leaking canvas shelter. I saw 
hares, and a wood owl and heard dis- 
tant movements that did not respond 
to my cries of "Christian? Is that you?" 

It got colder. I spent more time in 
the tent, creating a sleeping bag out of 
blankets and some tattered oilskins I 
found in the cellar of Oak Lodge. I re- 
paired the splits in the tent and stocked 
it with food and beer and dry wood for 
fires. By the middle of October I no- 
ticed that I could not spend more than 
an hour at the house before becoming 
restless, an unease that could only be 
dispelled by retunung to the glade and 
taking up my watching post, seated 
cross-legged just inside the tent, watch- 
ing the gloom a few yards away. On 
several occasions I took long, rather 
nervous sorties further into the forest, 
but I disliked the sensation of stillness 
and the tingling of my skin that seemed 
to repeatedly say that I was being 
watched. All imagination, of course, 
or an extremely sensitive response to 
woodland animals, for on one occa- 
sion, when I ran screaming and yelling 
at the thicket wherein I imagined the 
voyeur was crouched, I saw nothing 
but a red squirrel go scampering in a 
panic up into the crossed and confused 
branches of its home oak. 

Where was Christian? I tacked pa- 
per messages as deep in the woods and 
in as many locations, as I could. But I 
found that whenever I walked too far 


34 


Fantasy & Science Fiction 


into the great dip that seemed to be 
swallowing the forest down, I would, 
at some point within the span of a few 
hours, find myself approaching the 
glade and the tent again. Uncanny, 
yes, and infuriating too, but I began to 
get an idea of Christian's own frustra- 
tion at not being able to maintain a 
straight line in the dense oakwood. 
Perhaps, after all, there was some sort 
of field of force, complex and convo- 
luted, that channeled intruders back 
onto an outward track. 

And November came, and it was 
very cold indeed. The rain was sporad- 
ic and icy, but the wind reached down 
through the dense, browning foliage of 
the forest and seemed to find its way 
through clothes and oilskin and flesh 
to the cooling bones beneath. I was 
miserable, and my searches for Chris- 
tian grew more angry, more frustrated. 
My voice was often hoarse with shout- 
ing, my skin blistered and scratched 
from climbing trees. I lost track of 
time, realizing on more than one occa- 
sion, and with some shock, that I had 
been two, or perhaps three days in the 
forest without returning to the house. 
Oak Lodge grew stale and deserted. I 
used it to wash, to feed, to rest, but as 
soon as the worst ravages to my body 
were corrected, thoughts of Christian, 
anxiety about him, grew in my mind 
and pulled me back to the glade, as 
surely as if I were a metal filing tugged 
to a magnet. 

I began to suspect that something 
terrible had happened to him, or per- 


haps not terrible, just natural: if there 
really were boars, in the wood, he 
might have been gored by one and be 
either dead or dragging himself from 
the heartwoods to the edge, unable to 
cry for help. Or perhaps he had fallen 
from a tree or quite simply gone to 
sleep in the cold and wet and failed to 
revive in the morning. 

I searched for any sign of his body 
or his having passed by, and I found 
absolutely nothing, although I discov- 
ered the spoor of some large beast and 
marks on the lower trunks of several 
oaks that looked like nothing else than 
the scratchings of a tusked animal. 

But my mood of depression passed, 
and by mid-November I was quite con- 
fident again that Christian was alive. 
My feelings, now, were that he had 
somehow become trapped in this au- 
tumnal forest. 

For the first time in two weeks I 
went into the village, and after obtain- 
ing food supplies, I picked up the pa- 
pers that had been accumulating at the 
tiny newsagents. Skimming the front 
pages of the weekly local, I noticed an 
item concerning the decaying bodies of 
a man and an irish wolfhound, discov- 
ered in a ditch on a farmland near 
Grimley. Foul play was not suspected. 
I felt no emotion, apart from a curious 
coldness, a sense of sympathy for 
Christian, whose dream of freedom for 
Guiwenneth was surely no more than 
that, a fervent hope, a desire doomed 
to frustration. 

As for mythagos, I had only two 


Mythago Wood 


35 


encounters, neither of them of much 
note; the first was with a shadowy 
man-form that skirted the clearing, 
watching me, and finally ran into the 
darkness, striking at the trunks of trees 
with a short wooden stick. The second 
meeting was with the Twigling, whose 
shape I followed stealthily as he walk- 
ed to the millpond and stood in the 
trees, staring across at the boathouse. I 
felt no real fear of these manifesta- 
tions, merely a slight apprehension. 
But it was only after the second meet- 
ing that I began to realize how alien 
was the wood to the mythagos, and 
how alien were the mythagos to the 
wood. These were creatures created far 
away from their natural age, echoes of 
the past given substance, equipped 
with a life, a language and a certain fe- 
rocity that was quite inappropriate to 
the war-scarred world of 1947. No 
wonder the aura of the woodland was 
so charged with a sense of solitude, an 
infectious loneliness that had come to 
inhabit the body of my father, and 
then Christian, and which was even 
now crawling through my own tissues 
and would trap me if 1 allowed it. 

It was at this time, too, that I began 
to hallucinate. Notably at dusk, as 1 
stared into the woodlands, I saw 
movement at the edge of my vision. At 
first I put this down to tiredness or im- 
agination, but I remembered clearly 
the passage from my father's notebook 
in which he described how the pre- 
mythagos, the initial images, always 
appeared at his peripheral vision. I was 


frightened at first, unwilling to ac- 
knowledge that such creatures could be 
resident in my own mind and that my 
own interaction with the woodland 
had begun far earlier than Christian 
had thought; but after a while 1 sat and 
tried to see details of them. I failed to 
do so. 1 could sense movement and the 
occasional manlike shape, but whatever 
field was inducing their appearance was 
not yet strong enough to pull them into 
full view; either that, or my nnind could 
not yet control their emergence. 

On the 24th of November I went 
back to the house and spent a few 
hours resting and listening to the radio. 
A thunderstorm passed overhead, and 
I watched the rain and the darkness, 
feeling quite wretched and cold. But as 
soon as the air cleared and the clouds 
brightened, I draped my oilskin about 
my shoulders and headed back to the 
glade. I had not expected to find any- 
thing different, and so what should 
have been a surprise was more of a 
shock. 

The tent had been demolished, its 
contents strewn and trampled into the 
sodden turf of the clearing. Part of the 
guy rope dangled from the higher 
branches of the large oak, and the 
ground hereabouts was churned as if 
there had been a fight. As I walked into 
the space, I noticed that the ground 
was pitted by strange footprints, round 
and cleft, like hooves, I thought. 
Whatever the beast had been, it had 
quite effectively tom the canvas shelter 
to tatters. 


36 


Fantasy & Science Fiction 


I noticed then how silent the forest 
was, as if holding its breath and watch- 
ing. Every hair on my body stood on 
end, and my heartbeat was so power- 
ful that I thought my chest would 
burst. I stood by the ruined tent for 
just a second or two and the panic hit 
me, making my head spin and the for- 
est seem to lean towards me. I fled 
from the glade, crashing into the sop- 
ping undergrowth between two thick 
oak trunks. I ran through the gloom 
for several yards before realizing I was 
running ccway from the woodland 
edge. I think I cried out, and I turned 
and began to run back. 

A spear thudded heavily into the 
tree beside me, and I had run into the 
black wood shaft before I could stop; a 
hand gripped my shoulder and flung 
me against the tree. I shouted out in 
fear, staring into the mud-smeared, 
gnarled face of my attacker. He 
shouted back at me: 

''Shut up, Stevel For God's sake, 
shut upl" 

My panic quietened, my voice 
dropped to a whimper, and I peered 
hard at the angry man who held me. It 
was Christian, I realized, and my relief 
was so intense that I laughed and for 
long moments failed to notice what a 
total change had come about him. 

He was looking back towards the 
glade. "You've got to get out of here," 
he said, and before I could respond, he 
had wrenched me into a run and was 
practically dragging me back to the 
tent. 


In the clearing he hesitated and 
looked at me. There was no smile from 
behind the mask of mud and browning 
leaves. His eyes shone, but they were 
narrowed and lined. His hair was slick 
and spiky. He was naked but for a 
breechclout and a ragged skin jacket 
that could not have supplied much 
warmth. He carried three viciously 
pointed spears. Gone was the skeletal 
thinness of summer. He was muscular 
and hard, deep-chested and heavy- 
limbed. He was a man made for fight- 
ing. 

"You've got to get out of the wood, 
Steve, and for God's sake don't come 
back." 

"What's happened to you, 
Chris...?" I stuttered, but he shook his 
head and pulled me across the clearing 
and into the woods again, towards the 
south track. 

Immediately he stopped, staring in- 
to gloom, holding me back. "What is 
it, Chris?" And then I heard it^oo, a 
heavy crashing sound, something pick- 
ing its way through the bracken and 
the trees towards us. Following Chris- 
tian's gaze, I saw a monstrous shape, 
twice as high as a man, but man- 
shaped and stooped, black as night 
save for the great white splash of its 
face, still indistinct in the distance and 
grey ness. 

"God, it's broken out!" said Chris. 
"It's got between us and the edge." 

"What is it? A mythago?" 

"The mythago," said Chris quickly, 
and turned and fled back across the 


Mythago Wood 


37 


clearing. I followed, all tiredness sud- 
denly gone from my body. 

'The Urscumug? That's it? But it's 
not human ... it's animal. No human 
was ever, that tall." 

Looking back as I ran, I saw it enter 
the glade and move across the open 
space so fast I thought I was watching 
a speeded up film. It plunged into the 
wood behind us and was lost in dark- 
ness again, but it was running now, 
weaving between trees as it pursued us, 
closing the distance with incredible 
speed. 

Quite suddenly the ground went 
out from under me. I fell heavily into a 
depression in the ground, to be stead- 
ied, as I tumbled, by Christian, who 
moved a bramble covering across us 
and put a finger to his lips. I could 
barely make him out in this dark hidey 
hole, but I heard the sound of the Urs- 
cumug die away. I queried what was 
happening. 

"Has it moved off?" 

"Almost certainly not," said Chris- 
tian. "It's waiting, listening. It's been 
pursuing me for two days, out of the 
deep zones of the forest. It won't let up 
until I'm gone." 

"But why, Chris? Why is it trying 
to kill you?" 

"It's the old man's mythago," he 
said. "He brought it into being in the 
heartwoods, but it was weak and trap- 
ped until I came along and gave it more 
power to draw on. But it was the old 
man's mythago, and he shaped it 
slightly from his own mind, his own 


ego. Oh God, Steve, how he must 
have hated, and hated us, to have im- 
posed such terror onto the thing." 

"And Guiwenneth..." I said. 

"Yes ... Guiwenneth..." Christian 
echoed, speaking softly now. "He'll re- 
venge himself on me for that. If I give 
him half a chance." 

He stretched up to peer through the 
bramble covering. I could hear a dis- 
tant restless movement, and thought I 
caught the sound of some animal 
grumbling deep in its throat. 

"I thought he'd failed to create the 
primary mythago." 

Christian said, "He died believing 
that. What would he have done, I 
wonder, if he'd seen how successful 
he'd been." He crouched back down in 
the ditch. "It's like a boar. Half boar, 
half man; it walks upright, but can run 
like the wind. It paints its face white in 
the semblance of a human face. What- 
ever age it lived in, one thing's for sure, 
it lived a long time before man as we 
understand 'man' existed; this thing 
comes from a time when man and na- 
ture were so close that they were indis- 
tinguishable." 

He touched me then, on the arm, a 
hesitant touch, as if he were half afraid 
to make this contact with one from 
whom he had grown so distant. 

"When you run," he said, "run for 
the edge. Don't stop. And when you 
get out of the wood, don't come back. 
There is no way out for me now. I'm 
trapped in this wood by something in 
my own mind as surely as if I were a 


38 


Fantasy & Science Fiction 


mythago myself. Don't come back 
here, Steve. Not for a long, long time." 

"Chris — " I began, but too late. He 
had thrown back the coverirtg of the 
hole and was running from me. Mo- 
ments later the most enormous shape 
passed overhead, one huge black foot 
landing just inches from my frozen 
body. It passed by in a split second, 
but as I scrambled from the hole and 
began to run, I glanced back, and the 
creature, hearing me, glanced back 
too, and for that instant of mutual con- 
templation, as we both moved apart in 
the forest, I saw the face that had been 
painted across the blackened features 
of the boar. 

The Urscumug opened its mouth to 
roar, and my father seemed to leer at 
me. 

CODA 

One morning, in early spring, I found 
a brace of hare hanging from one of the 
pothooks in the kitchen; below them, 
scratched in the yellow paintwork on 
the wall, was the letter C. The gift was 
repeated about two months later, but 
then nothing, and a year has passed. 

I have not been back to the wood. 

I have read my father's diary ten 
times if I have read it once, steeping 
myself in the mystery of his life as 
much as he had steeped himself in the 
mystery of his own unconscious links 


with the primeval woodland. I find, in 
his erratic recordings, much that tells 
of his sense of danger, of what — just 
once — he calls 'ego's mythological 
ideal,' the involvement of the creator's 
mind which he feared would influence 
the shape and behavior of the mythago 
forms. He had known of the danger, 
then, but I wonder if Christian had ful- 
ly comprehended this most subtle of 
the occult processes occurring in the 
forest. From the darkness and pain of 
my father's mind a single thread of 
gentleness and love had emerged in the 
fashioning of a girl in a green tunic, 
dooming her to a helplessness in the 
forest that was contrary to her nahiral 
form. But if she were to emerge again, 
it would be with Christian's mind con- 
trolling her, and Christian had no such 
preconceived ideas about a woman's 
strength or weakness. It would not be 
the same encounter. 

It is summer now. The trees are 
full-leaved, the forest at its most im- 
penetrable. I stay in the house, out of 
range, although I've noticed that, at 
dusk especially, shapes and figures be- 
gin to cluster in my peripheral vision. 
The aura of the woodland has reached 
the front of the house. Only in the 
back room, among the books and spec- 
imens, can I find a temporary escape 
from the encroaching dark. 




Mythago Wood 


39 




Books 

BARRY N. 
MALZBERC 



Drawing by Gahan Wilson 


Dream Makers, by Charles L. Platt, 
Berkley Books, $2.75. 

Fantastic Lives: Autobiographical Essays 
by Notable Science Fiction Writers, edited 
by Martin Harry Greenberg, Southern Illi- 
nois University Press, $15.00. 

What If? Volumes I and //, edited by Rich- 
ard A. Lupoff, Pocket Books, $2.50 each. 

Junction, by Jack M. Dann, Dell Books, 
$2.25. 

Phillip Roth points out (in Reading 
Myself and Others) that he got into all 
that trouble with Portnoy's Complaint 
because a novel in the form of a cQnfes- 
sion was misconstrued by various well- 
meaning sorts as a confession in the 
form of a novel. It is only a few totter- 
ing steps from that insight to these 
provinces and a speculation: in the old 
days science fiction might have been 
characterized as confessions in the 
form of — well — science fiction, but 
in true decadent splendor the field has 
now made it possible to have confes- 
sions in the form of confessions. Hence 
Charles Platt's 29 interviews with 26 
modem science fiction writers (Kate 
Wilhelm and Damon Knight inter- 
viewed one another; Mary KomblutK 
spoke about her late husband on the 
telephone); hence Martin Greenberg's 
collection of nine personal essays by 
established figures who did not make it 
into the 1975 Harrison/ Aldiss Hell's 
Cartographers, the obvious inspiration 
for this book. Hence also Lupoff 's an- 
thologies which are personal rumina- 
tions on the history of the awards 


40 


Fantasy & Science Fiction 




process in science fiction interrupted 
by stories which are LupofFs personal 
best of their years. Hence even Jack M. 
Dann's second novel. Junction, which 
in its power and the naked self-expo- 
sure of the protagonist's persona {not 
the authorial persona, it must be em- 
phasized; a skillful novel is never auto- 
biographical even if it is) strikes me as 
the kind of work which not only 
would have been unpublishable in this 
genre as recently as 1970 but would not 
even have been considered worth writ- 
ing by any established professional 
simply because it could not have found 
a market. (Self-censorship is the least 
visible and the most effective censor- 
ship of all.) 

Most of the subjects of Dream 
Makers and Fantastic Lives paid dues 
back in that dismal time of course, be- 
fore academia, symposia, technologi- 
cal advance and the expansion of audi- 
ence had granted any value to their 
persona, and it may explain their will- 
ingness, indeed wistful eagerness to 
open up for the page and for the tape 
recorder. Platt's method went beyond 
the interview however; interwoven 
with the statements of his subjects are 
Platt's impressions of them, his de- 
scription of domicile, his critical judge- 
ment on some of their work and his as- 
sessment of their self-assessments; all 
of this cunning involution leading to 
one of the most important works about 
science fiction and its processes and to 
a book which may be considered dec- 
ades from now to be the one work 


about the field which every student of 
it in this time must read. What Dream 
Makers is about is nothing other than 
the effect the writing of science fiction 
has had upon a group of people who 
are otherwise as heterogeneous and 
scattered as any group might be, and 
the ultimate impact of the book may be 
terrifying because all of these people — 
people as diverse as Ed Bryant, Frank 
Herbert, Kate Wilhelm, Isasc Asimov, 
Ray Bradbury, Michael Moorcock, Ian 
Watson — seem to be suffering in 
about the same way; it is only the 
symptomatology that varies, certain 
defense mechanisms which might be 
contemptible to one writer being seized 
upon by another and vice and versa 
and so on. 

That effect and the symptomatology 
probably has something to do with the 
interface* between the visions of these 
writers which are quite powerful, dis- 
turbing and profound and the nature 
of their lives of middle class Americans 
in this technocratized, bureaucratized, 
anomic and awful century; the dispari- 
ty between private passion and public 
anonymity has in various ways forced 
them into personae and masks of self- 
delusion. Asimov wants to be seen as 
an ordinary, modestly remunerated 
working man, Brunner as a patron of 
libertarian causes, Delany as a meta- 

*In the dozen years that I have been writing 
essays, criticism and reviews / have never 
used this word until now and I herewith 
promise not to use it for another dozen 
years. 


Books 


41 


physician in search of a New Defini- 
tion of science fiction, Robert Sheckley 
as a kind of holy naif on the borders of 
expectation, Budrys as an artisan wed- 
ding his expeditions for a More Perfect 
Science Fiction in the interstices of a 
practical, middle-class life, Disch as a 
litterateur. Farmer as a proletarian 
with purple patches, Aldiss as an es- 
tablishmentarian, Bryant as an artist 
trying to break free of self-doubt, Sil- 
verberg as a modest custodian of his 
talent now dedicated to pleasing the 
people, Ellison as — well, as many 
things and on and on and on; of all 
these persons the only one who does 
not seem to have a good handle on 
how he wants to appear is your faithful 
oversigned whose shrieks of confusion 
and pain are interrupted gently by 
Platt only to enable breath to be recap- 
tured for additional shrieks. That writ- 
ing science fiction in America might be 
a terribly painful and enervating pur- 
suit for those who take it seriously can 
certainly be inferred from these inter- 
views — Philip K. Dick's is Exhibit A 
— but it is almost never stated. Dream 
Makers lives and breathes in its impli- 
cation; Platt is there to make careful 
and occasionally deflating observa- 
tions, and the brief appendices (Platt 
attributes them to the Nicholls Science 
Fiction Encyclopedia) limning out the 
body of work are useful and factual, 
but what this book is really about can 
only be perceived in its silence and 
shadows. It is a fearfully upsetting and 
unsettling book to at least this one sci- 


ence fiction writer and it becomes more 
unsettling on every additional reading 
(and this book must be read at least 
twice if it is read at all); it is also, be- 
cause of Platt's considerable literary 
skill, clarity of mind and not always 
masked impiousness a sardonic and de- 
flating accomplishment. 

Some of the later interviews (the 
book is organized chronologically as 
the interviews took place, beginning 
with Asimov in NYC in early 1978 and 
ending at the World SF Convention in 
England in September of 1979) are 
truncate and hasty; lack the force and 
scope of the earlier ones (because the 
writers seen at the convention were not 
seen at home) and the interview with 
Mary Kombluth transcribed from a 
1973 phone conversation does not be- 
long in the book; it is superficial and 
(the sole exception for Dream Makers) 
unchallenged. Otherwise I have no 
quarrel with this book, which will have 
a sequel (29 all-new aU-different means 
of coping!!) and which should be forc- 
ed into the hands of every Clarion 
Workshop attendee upon entrance into 
the dormitory. It might have been 
meant to save a lot of people a lot of 
trouble. 

Fantastic Lives might save people 
trouble too — the example of Hell's 
Cartographers proves that science fic- 
tion writers can do a literary or person- 
al memoir, in the main, better than al- 
most any other group — but it is not as 
happy or observant an example as its 
predecessor or as Dream Makers; in 


42 


Fantasy & Science Fiction 


Hells Cartographers the editors, Harri- 
son and Aldiss either lucked into or 
sought out six writers who unbidden 
could do the autobiographical essay at 
the top of their form, but Martin H. 
Greenberg with, perhaps, less of a bud- 
get and less of an impetus (this book 
would obviously fall in the shadow of 
HC) has not been so fortunate. Fantas- 
tic Lives — essays by Ellison, Farmer, 
Lafferty, MacLean, your oversigned, 
Reynolds, Margaret St. Clair, Spinrad 
and van Vogt — appears to be a book 
which has not been so much edited as 
assembled; the call for manuscripts 
went out, in due course the manu- 
scripts came in and went into galley 
with hardly a pause for copyediting. 
Greenberg cannot really be blamed for 
this — the essays were written for 
modest advances and, as Greenberg 
has pointed out, it is hardly possible to 
ask writers of stature to revise or start 
again for so little compensation — but 
this does not help the book which 
more than anything has the aspect of a 
missed opportunity. Only St. Clair 
and Van Vogt have done the job as it 
might have originally been construed; 
they write of their lives and careers in 
science fiction and the mutual effect 
which science fiction and their lives 
had upon one another with honesty 
and force but the seventother essayists 
have, alas, taken advantage rather 
than given it. Spinrad's "A Prince 
From Another Land" gives an interest- 
ing history of the (publisher-induced) 
failure of his novel Passing Through 


the Flame but tells us nothing whatso- 
ever of Spinrad; it is only by grace of 
Greenberg's brief introduction that we 
are even given his age. Reynold's "Sci- 
ence Fiction and Socioeconomics" is 
about — well, it is about science fiction 
and socioeconomics, but again there are 
only hints of the Mack Reynolds who 
has been a voluntary expatriate for 
three decades, who was Analogs most 
prolific contributor during the sixties 
and who in the 1976 Best of Mack Rey- 
nolds indicated an intelligence far more 
sardonic and rebellious than would be 
indicated here. Ellison in a "Memoir: I 
Have No Mouth and I Must Scream" 
writes what would be an extended in- 
troduction to the story as it might ap- 
pear in a collection but gives very little 
else; Katherine MacLean's "The Ex- 
panding Mind" writes of a childhood 
Katherine MacLean's first encounter 
with science fiction and lets us know 
nothing of even the adolescent; your 
faithful oversigned has spliced two 
(previously collected) essays with just 
a snippet of autobiography. Farmer 
has given some autobiographical detail 
but almost no interpretation (what 
was most valuable about Hells Car- 
tographers was that Silverberg, Aldiss, 
Harrison, Pohl, Bester and Knight all 
told us how it felt to be a science fiction 
reader, a science fiction writer) and 
R.A. Lafferty, uncharacteristically, 
has vented much bitterness but little in- 
struction. 

I am not asking any of these writers 
to grant us red meat, raw guts, the 


Books 


43 


pure and living blood of the Lamb. (I 
did not.) 1 am only saying that if one 
accepts the invitation to appear in a 
book of this sort, at no matter how low 
an advance, one owes the editor and 
the readership more than what hap- 
pened to be closest at hand last Thurs- 
day or what thrice-told tale he can, like 
a hollow toastmaster, get away with 
tonight. Mea culpa; I stand first among 
equals, but I think that if I had to do it 
over again I would have declined the 
invitation, would have (as I have be- 
fore) done my non-confessionals in 
another place. Would that most of the 
rest of us in Fantastic Lives had done 
the same; perhaps the book will make 
a better impression than I think and 
make possible a sequel or sequels. 

In the introduction to What If? 
Volume I, Richard A. Lupoff discusses 
the various awards which through the 
years have been established to run in 
competition with the Hugos which 
Lupoff (like all of the rest of us) feels 
are science fiction's major awards with 
major deficiencies which render it like- 
ly often enough to be litde more than a 
popularity ballot and a rigged one at 
that. The John W. Campbell Awards, 
the Nebulas, the International Fantasy 
Awards, the Ditmars, the British Fan- 
tasy Federation, all of them honest at- 
tempts, Lupoff states but the problem 
is the cachet of the donor ... exactly 
who the hell are the small committees 
or groups (and in certain cases individ- 
uals) who grant these awards? The Hu- 


gos at least have a wide base; they are 
(at least in the last decade) open 
awards available for voting to anyone 
who cares to pay the fee to be a sup- 
porting member of a world science fic- 
tion convention. That gives the Hugos 
more credibility than could be found in 
any competing award, and the world 
(and the Hugo losers) are, hence stuck 
with them. What If?, a projected four 
volume set, will be an attempt to recti- 
fy injustices by awarding retroactive 
best of the year citations to writers and 
stories which should have/might 
have/could have won. 

And Lupoff of course — almost self- 
evidently and probably in full con- 
sciousness — is hoist on his own, as we 
say in the boondocks, petard. Who is 
Richard A. Lupoff? He is a competent 
professional, a well known fan, the ed- 
itor once of an award winning (1963) 
fan magazine, a reader and devotee 
and participant in this field for almost 
three decades ... but he is, nonetheless, 
simply Richard A. Lupoff, good fellow 
and true but merely one individual, 
and although the awarding of retroac- 
tive Hugos is a good and gimmicky 
idea for an anthology and is undoubt- 
edly the basis upon which Pocket 
Books was sold the proposal, this is lit- 
tle more than one man's excuse for put- 
ting together one man's idea of a good 
anthology, and it is perhaps best to 
leave it at that. Lupoff's introductions 
are chatty, informal, reminiscent, 
high-spirited and brisk — call this the 
Spider Robinson school of High Fan^ 


Fantasy & Science Fiction 


Writing — and not filled with too 
many inaccuracies; there are inside 
jokes, allusions and references which 
will evade those readers who are not 
part of the convention-attending inner 
circle (which means 90% of the pro- 
spective audience for this book) but as 
an attempt to get back into print some 
stories which were overlooked in their 
time. What If? is laudable. Introduc- 
tions, as Harlan Ellison of all p)eople 
pointed out, can be skipped if you 
don't like them. 

What If? was originally intended to 
be an enormous single volume; con- 
temporary, bleak publishing exigencies 
cut it back first to a proposed double 
volume and the present intention to do 
it in four, the latter two to be published 
later this year. As a single book it 
might have been more impressive, 
have had a weightiness to it which 
would »have granted an authority 
which in four skimpy books simply is 
not there, but with publisher 
prerogative there can be no quarrel. For 
the record, Lupoffs retroactive Hugo 


winners and their years are as follows; 

1952: "Firewater," by William 
Tenn; 1953: "Four In One," by Damon 
Knight; 1954: "Golden Helix," by The- 
odore Sturgeon; 1955: "One Ordinary 
Day With Peanuts," by Shirley Jack- 
son; 1956: "The Man Who Came Ear- 
ly/' by Poul Anderson; 1957: 'The 
Mile-Long Spaceship," by Kate Wil- 
helm; 1958: "Two Dooms," by Cyril 
M. Kombluth; 1959: "The PI Man," by 
Alfred Bester; 1960: The Lost Kafooz- 
alum," by Pauline Ash well; 1961: "The 
Sources of the Nile," by Avram David- 
son; 1962: "Where Is the Bird of Fire?" 
by Thomas Burnett Swann; 1963: 
"Stand-by," by Philip K. Dick; 1964: 
"Now Is Forever," by Thomas M. 
Disch; 1965: "All the King's Men," by 
Barrington J. Bailey. 

Subjectivity is the name of this 
game: I think that Lupoff is probably 
right for '58 and '59 and can fight a 
good fight in '55 or '57. I also think 
that "One Ordinary Day With Pea- 
nuts" can hardly (with five anthology 
appearances in this field alone) be con- 


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45 


sidered an overlooked story; the same 
is true of ''Mile-Long Spaceship." 1 
think; I think ... but / didn't have the 
wit to work up the proposal for 
If? Lupoff did and Lupoff prevails. 

Jack M. Dann is perhaps the most , 
underrated modem science fiction 
writer; bom in 1945 he has published 
only two niovels — the 1976 Starhiker 
and now Junction, which dates from 
magazine appearances in different 
form in the early seventies — and edit- 
ed several anthologies but he has pro- 
duced thirty or forty short stories 
(some of them collected in Time- 
Tipping, 1980) of uniformly high qual- 
ity and at least five of them — 'Time- 
tipping/' "Amnesia," "A Quiet Revo- 
lution For Death," "Going Under" and 
"Camps" — are as fine as any work 
which has been published in the genre 
in its difficult and uneven history. In 
his more recent work the power of 
Dann's vision, refined by an unusual 
concentration of focus and remorseless 
clarity has put the work on a level of 
attainment comparable to Kozinski 
(whom he somewhat resembles) or the 


demented, terrible visions of Kafka or 
Mandelstam. Because his work comes 
closest in ambition and effect to the 
great European writers and because he 
is working in a genre which even in its 
most open period in the early seventies 
was not precisely oriented toward the 
remorseless, the difficult or the tor- 
menting, Dann has not achieved due 
recognition although he has been able 
(to the editors' credit) to publish his 
work and now, with Junction, to 
achieve the mass market. (Starhiker, a 
Harper & Row hardcover, never found 
a paperback publisher.) Junction is a 
bildungsroman in reverse; its protago- 
nist journeys to and eventually dwells 
in a hell which is not metaphorical; the 
devices of science fiction are used for 
the metaphysical, it is a rigorous and 
deadly trap of a novel which initially 
resists a reader but eventually will take 
the reader in, and it is another step in 
what I take to be one of the great ca- 
reers not in science fiction but in Amer- 
ican literature. Jack M. Dann is 36 
years old. Kafka and Mandelstam, in 
pity and terror were done for at that 
age; Dann is about to truly begin. 


Mercury Press, Inc., Box 56, Cornwall, Conn. 06753 

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46 


Fantasy & Science Fiction 



'7 was starting to wonder if you'd turn up!" 
Copyright © 1981 by Gahan Wilson 


47 


John Morress]/ returns with a new story about Kedrigern the 
wizard, his troll, Spot, and his ebony-haired girl friend, who 
never quite made the complete transition from toad to Princess 
until.... 


The Gifts of 
Conhoon 


BY 


T 


JOHN MORRESSY 


|o the untrained eye, the two 
medallions were indistinguishable. 
Even Kedrigern was hard put to deter- 
mine which of the two had hung 
around his neck since his acceptance 
into the guild of wizards and which 
had belonged to one of his colleagues. 
He could not begin to guess which of 
his fellow wizards had had the misfor- 
tune to be so rudely bereft of his talis- 
man of power. 

Both medallions were round, of a 
size to cover a man's palm, about the 
thickness of a small fingernail's 
breadth, egg-smooth on one side. 
Around the rim of the reverse side of 
each ran a band of symbols, cleanly 
and deeply incised into the metal. At 
the upper edge, just within the rings to 
which the silver chain was attached, 
were two notches: the larger , the Cleft 
of Clemency; the smaller, the Kerf of 
Judgement. In the exact center was a 


tiny hole, the Aperture of True Vision. 
At the bottom was a geometric pattern 
of crossing broken lines, which had no 
name. 

Kedrigern hefted the two medal- 
lions in his hands and laid them gently 
in the pans of his balance. They came 
to rest on a perfect horizontal. He plac- 
ed them back to back. They fitted so 
smoothly that he could scarce discern 
the crack of their junction. He turned 
them this way and that, squinted and 
peered and studied them, and at last 
replaced his own medallion around his 
neck. He laid the other before him and 
rang a dainty silver bell that stood on 
his cluttered table. 

Minutes later, a grotesque little fig- 
ure careened into the chamber on great 
slapping feet. It was Kedrigem's troll- 
of-all-work. He stood knee-high to his 
master, and most of him was head, and 
very ugly. He had large hands, larger 


48 


Fantasy A Science Fiction 



feet, and not much to hold them all to- 
gether. 

"Fetch me a nice cold mug of ale. 
Spot. One of the large mugs," said the 
wizard. 

"Yah?" 

"No, just the ale. Be quick about it, 
but mind you don't spill any." 

'Tah, yah!" Spot cried, in a voice 
like a distant war- trump, and reeled 
out of the chamber like a top-heavy 
galleon under full sail. 

Kedrigem sat back in his chair and 
licked his lips in anticipation. Even 
here, in the shadowed cool of his 
study, the warmth of the summer 
afternoon was beginning to penetrate. 
He looked again at the medallion, ly- 
ing in a patch of sunlight on the table 
before him, and on an impulse he 
snatched it up and hung it around his 
neck. 

In an instant he tore it off and with 
a cry of dismay dropped it back on the 
table. It had weighed around his neck 
like an anchor, and the slender chain 
had been like a toothed garrote against 
the soft flesh. Clearly, wearing the me- 
dallion was not the solution to his di- 
lemma. 

What, then, was? A medallion of 
the guild was meant to be worn by a 
wizard, and Kedrigem himself was the 
only wizard within five days travel. It 
was not meant to be buried or hidden 
away. It could never be destroyed. 
Most certainly, it was not to be left ly- 
ing about like some meaningless trin- 
ket. The medallion had great virtue 


and conferred a certain amount of 
power even on the uninitiated. 

It was a considerable problem, and 
Kedrigem wished that the second me- 
dallion had never come into his posses- 
sion. 

Spot came flapping in, with a frost- 
coated mug of cold ale on a wooden 
salver, and whirled off again to be 
about his household duties. Kedrigem 
took a deep draft, sighed with comfort- 
able satisfaction, and cocking his feet 
up on the edge of the table, he tipped 
his chair back and stared with unfocus- 
ed eyes into the cobwebby comer of 
the room. 

That was the trouble with Spot. 
Anything within the litle troll's reach 
was kept relentlessly scrubbed and 
dusted, but his range was limited. The 
upper bookshelves were blanketed 
with thick gray dust, like a bed of dead 
ash, and the comers were all rounded 
by cobwebs. 

Kedrigem pondered the mess for a 
time; then, taking another pull at the 
mug, he rose to inspect his shelves 
more closely. They were very dusty in- 
deed. It was shameful. As his eyes 
darted back and forth, disapproving, 
they lit on a small black book, passed 
it, returned, and held. 

A glow of triumph lit the wizard's 
face. He had found his solution. Pluck- 
ing down the book and blowing the 
dust from its upper surfaces, he leafed 
briskly through its pages until he came 
to the desired rubric: "To Summon Up 
an Unidentified Essence, Either Dead, 


The Gifts Of Conhoon 


49 


Distant, or Sleeping, for Informational 
Purposes/' With a quiet little laugh of 
pleasure, he withdrew to his table, 
pausing on his way to bolt the study 
door. 

A few hours later, just at sundown, 
all was in readiness. The ring was 
drawn, the candles placed and lit, the 
medallion in proper position. 
Kedrigem cleared his throat — it was 
dry, but there was no time to correct 
that now — and began to recite the 
spell. 

For a time, nothing happened. But 
when Kedrigem intoned a certain 
phrase, the candles wavered and then 
steadied and burned evenly once more. 
He came to the end of the spell and 
waited in silence. In the center of the 
ring, hovering over the medallion, was 
a shimmering wisp of smoke, no great- 
er than the dying breath of a snuffed 
candle. It moved, and it grew, and as 
Kedrigem looked on, it filled out to the 
insubstantial likeness of a bald old 
man, white-bearded, untidily dressed, 
with a nasty wound on his head and an 
expression of puzzlement on his wrin- 
kled features. 

"Who are you who wore the me- 
dallion?" Kedrigem asked with solemn 
intonation. 

"Devil a bit I know about that," 
said the apparition. 

"Has your identity been stolen by 
enchantment?" 

"Hard to say, that is." 

"What befell you, then?" 

"All that is known to me is a 


bloody great bash on the skull that has 
left me with the mother and father of 
all headaches and set me to blowing 
about the between-worlds like a puff 
of smoke." 

"A ghost cannot have a headache." 

"Easy for you to say, Mister Flesh- 
and-Bones," said the apparition pee- 
vishly. "For all your certainty, I have a 
head on me throbbing like the Black 
Dmm of Dun na Goll when it summon- 
ed home at evening the nine thousand 
red cows that were the wealth and glo- 
ry of Robtach of the Silver Elbows, 
Robtach who dwelt in the high hall 
of-" 

"Conhoonl" Kedrigem cried happi- 

ly- 

"He did not dwell in Conhoon, that 
much I know, and I would appreciate 
you keeping your bloody voice to a 
whisper." 

More softly, Kedrigem said, 
"You're Conhoon. Conhoon of the 
Three Gifts. Conhoon the Wizard — 
don't you remember?" 

"It may be," said the apparition 
warily. 

"It is. You belonged to a guild of 
wizards. Each of us wore a silver me- 
dallion like the one around my neck. 
Remember the medallion?" 

"I do not." 

"Do you recall the names of any of 
our brothers? Perhaps you remember 
Axpad, or Tristaver. Or Belsheer." 

"I do not." 

"Surely you remember Hithemils. 
He was our treasurer. Everyone meets 


50 


Fantasy & Science Fiction 


him at one time or another." 

"I do not remember your Hithemils 
or any of the others, and for the love 
of God, mister, will you shut your gob 
and give me a cold cloth to put on my 
head before I faint with the pain? Cruel 
enough to drag me here from the bless- 
ed silence of between-worlds, but to 
torture me with questions is inhuman." 

"Ghosts do not have headaches." 

"This ghost could kick the eyes out 
of your head if he ever got loose from 
this ring, and we would see about 
headaches then," said the apparition 
grimly. 

Things were not working at all 
well. Kedrigem bit back his instinctive 
angry response and said mildly, "Con- 
hoon, don't you remember anything? 
Don't you remember your three gifts?" 

"The only gifts I require now are a 
cold cloth for my head, wool to plug 
my ears, and a stone the size of a baby 
to throw at you." 

"Your first gift was sweetness of the 
tongue." Kedrigem paused for a mo- 
ment, then went on. "The second gift 
was keenness of memory." He paused 
again, longer, and his expression grew 
thoughtful. "I cannot now recall the 
third gift of Conhoon, but I begin to 
suspect that you are not he." 

"Do you now? Well, Mister Flesh- 
and-Bones, you will be pleased to 
know that your nagging has given a 
push to my memory, and I now 
recall — " 

A knock came at the door. Kedri- 
gem turned, and in the moment of his 


distraction, the apparition in the circle 
began to fade. It dwindled quickly, like 
smoke blowing through a crack, as 
Kedrigem looked helplessly on. The 
spell was completely shattered now, 
and there was no way to mend it. Mut- 
tering angrily, he went to the door, un- 
bolted it, and pulled it wide. 

"What do you want?" he snapped. 

"Brereep?" came a voice gently, 
from the shadows. 

At once his manner softened. "Ah, 
Princess, I'm sorry. I was working, and 
I completely forgot about dinner. I 
hope it isn't spoiled." 

"Brereep." 

"Good. I'd feel terrible if it were. 
Come inside. I'll just put a few things 
away, and we'll go to dinner directly," 
Kedrigem said, waving her into his 
sanctum. 

The soft candleglow stmck high- 
lights from Princess' ebony hair and 
the golden coronet on her brows. Ked- 
rigem gazed at her lovingly — she was 
wearing her dark-blue gown, one of his 
favorites — and squeezed her hand be- 
fore turning to his cluttered table. 

"Brereep?" she asked, looking cu- 
riously at the circle. 

"Nothing much, really. Just a small 
magic to find out whose medallion that 
is." Kneeling by the circle and wetting 
his thumb, he rubbed a break in the 
line, neutralizing the magic. "Don't 
want anything slipping through while 
I'm not here," he explained. He re- 
moved the candles and then took up 
the medallion. "This was the property 


The Gifts Of Conhoon 


51 


of Conhoon of the Three Gifts, I think. 
Can't be positive. He was one of our 
Irish members. He doesn't live too far 
off, but he always kept to himself." 

"Brereep." 

"No, I don't think so. He was a sur- 
ly fellow. And it was all a waste of 
good magic, anyway. I still don't know 
what to do with this thing." He held up 
the medallion and it turned slowly, 
flashing mirrorlike in the multiple can- 
dlelight. Princess reached out to touch 
it. He placed it in her hand. 

"Lovely thing, isn't it? It would 
look grand against that blue dress. I've 
always thought that silver looked best 
on a dark-haired woman. Something 
about the way the light...." 

Their eyes met. She held the medal- 
lion against her dress and murmured, 
"Brereep?" 

"Oh, no. That's only supposed to 
be worn by a wizard, and you ... 
well...." 

He weighed the possibilities. The 
consequences of magic were always 
unpredictable, even to a wizard. Unau- 
thorized wearing of the medallion 
might cause Princess to turn back into 
a toad, or into something far worse. 
Still, she had been enchanted once and 
lived for some time under a spell. That 
might qualify her, however marginal- 
ly, as a wizard. 

He looked at her, beautiful in the 
soft candleglow, and thought how it 
would be if she had her speech once 
again. They communicated fairly well 
now, but there were times when he 


longed to hear a woman's soft voice 
breathe his name. A croak did tend to 
undermine rpmantic moods. The 
sound of sweet song would be a wel- 
come addition to the household ... 
long talks by the fireside in the cold 
winter nights ... reading aloud from 
the fine old books.... 

And then he recalled that one of 
Conhoon's three gifts was sweetness of 
the tongue. Clearly, the gift did not re- 
side in Conhoon's person; it might be 
in the medallion; and if it was, it could 
be passed on. He took the medallion 
from her hands and held it up before 
her. 

"There's a bit of a risk. Princess. 
Perhaps a big risk," he said. 

"Brereep," she replied staunchly. 

"You're right. Here goes, then." 

He placed the silver chain around 
her neck, and she reached back to 
draw her hair free. The medallion lay 
on her breast like a full moon against 
the night sky. She took a deep breath, 
cleared her throat, swallowed, and 
looked at him, wide-eyed. 

"Can you speak?" he asked appre- 
hensively. 

"I can," she replied. 

"How do you feel? Different? Bet- 
ter? Sick?" 

In a low sweet voice she said, "It is 
odd that I feel, and in three ways do I 
feel odd, and small good does it do me 
in body, mind, or heart to feel as I do, 
and less good to know that there is 
devil a thing I can do about it. First, I 
feel like the grain of sand in the right 


52 


Fantasy & Science Fiction 


eye of Ciallglind that caused him to 
run mad and screaming in pain stark 
naked the length and breadth of Ire- 
land for twelve bitter years in all man- 
ner of weather. Second, 1 feel like the 
splinter of pine in the ball of the thumb 
of Goiste that festered and grew red 
and pus-filled and caused his arm to 
swell up to the thickness of Kathleen 
MacRossa s leg, and him sworn to do 
battle single-handed against the sons of 
Nish at break of day. Third, I feel like 
the flea in the ear of Seisclend that 
caused him to forget wife and children 
and home, and forsake the gift of hon- 
eyed speech and the making of golden 
song on the harp, and live for sixteen 
years filthy grunting ragged and stink- 
ing, with the pigs of his own yard, and 
they taking constant advantcige of him. 
And that is how I feel, and not pleasant 
is it to feel this way'' 

"I should think not," said Kedrigem. 

'There is more to say, and say it I 
will in good time, but now a hunger is 
on me greater than the hunger of the 
sons of Ogan after doing battle four 
days and four nights, without stopping 
once for breath or refreshment, against 
the followers of Goll Black-Tooth to 
save the honor of the fair Fithir. Let us 
proceed to dinner," said Princess. 

"By all means," Kedrigem said, 
taking her arm. 

She spoke not a word during the 
meal. Kedrigem observed her closely, 
but could discern no side-effects 
brought on by her wearing of the me- 
dallion. As far as he could tell, it had 

The Gifts Of Conhoon 


given her back her power of speech, 
and nothing more. 

Of course, it seemed to have given 
her back a considerably greater 
amount of speech than she might rea- 
sonably be expected to have lost. Ked- 
rigem could not be certain, but he sus- 
pected that in the days before her en- 
chantment, Princess had not respond- 
ed to simple questions in the manner of 
a superannuated Hibernian delivering 
an after-dinner speech. But this, he as- 
sured himself, was probably the natu- 
ral reaction to years of being unable to 
do anything but croak. It would surely 
pass. 

"A delightful dinner," he said, pat- 
ting his lips with his napkin. He said 
much the same thing every evening at 
this point. 

"Grand it was, surely, and great is 
my satisfaction thereat," said Princess. 
Kedrigem smiled and nodded, and she 
went on, "I am pleased and comforted 
by this meal in five distinct ways, and 1 
shall now expatiate upon my satisfac- 
tion under these five headings in prose 
of a incantatory nature." 

"Well, that sounds—" Kedrigem 
began, but she broke in. 

"The first way I am pleased is in my 
eyes, by the sight of the clean napery 
and the shining silver and the gleaming 
of candlelight on the wineglasses and 
the pleasant view of deepening twilight 
on the hills that rise like the Hills of 
Musheele beyond the farther window, 
and expecially pleased I am because 
there have many a time been greasy 

53 


fingerprints on my plate and I unable 
to articulate my displeasure. These 
cleanly sights are as pleasing to me as 
the sight of the small white foot of 
Saraid of the Three Twins was to King 
Rory the Much-Bathed." 

"Well, Tm glad that you — " 

"And the second way I am pleased 
is in my nostrils, by the smell of the 
roasting duck and the tang of the wine 
and the clean scent of the fine wax can- 
dles. As pleasing to me are these min- 
gled aromas as the fragrance of his sta- 
ble was to Tuathal of the Black Bull. 
And the third way I am pleased is in 
my ears, by — " 

'"You must excuse me, my dear," 
said Kedrigem, starting up. "I just 
remembered that I left a candle burn- 
ing in my study, and if — " 

"You did not," she said. "If there is 
any politeness in you, you will sit still 
and listen while I tell of my satisfac- 
tion." 

Kedrigem resumed his seat. He re- 
mained seated, fidgeting discreetly, 
while Princess went on to explain, with 
the help of illustrative examples, how 
the dinner had given her pleasure, 
comfort, and satisfaction of the ears, 
tastebuds, and fingertips. Having ex- 
hausted her sensory inventory, she 
paused for a breath and concluded, 
"And that is how I am satisfied by this 
lovely dinner." 

"Pm glad," said Kedrigem warily, 
fearful that anything he said might 
bring on another monologue but too 
polite to remain churlishly silent. 


She smiled, but spoke no more. For 
the rest of the evening she sat at her 
loom, and for a time she sang softly, to 
herself, in a mournful voice that 
Kedrigem found utterly enchanting. 
He could not distinguish the words, 
but the melody was of a beauty that 
needed no adornment, and he could 
not bring himself to intermpt her. He 
listened, eyes closed, while the evening 
breeze cooled his brow, and he relished 
his good fortune. Here was the sweet 
domesticity he had dreamed of, a joy 
unknown to his fellow wizards. He 
was a fortunate man indeed, and if 
Princess chose to rattle on now and 
then, well, he could put up with-it in 
exchange for moments like this. After 
all, she had listened to him for years 
with no comment but an occasional 
"Brereep." Fair was fair. 

ftjine next day, he began to have sec- 
ond thoughts. Before breakfast. Prin- 
cess spoke for the better part of an 
hour on the nine joys of a good night's 
sleep and the sixteen beauties of the 
dawn. Kedrigem spent the morning in 
his study, but at lunchtime she was 
ready with an extended recitation on 
the four goodnesses of bread, in which 
a woman named Daime of the Plump 
Hands figured repeatedly in some ob- 
scure way. He returned quickly to his 
study, his stomach protesting the haste 
with which he had finished his meal, 
and emerged for dinner with great, and 
justified, trepidation. They dined in 


54 


Fantasy & Science Fiction 


blessed silence, but the meal was pre- 
ceded and followed by a two-part solil- 
oquy on the thirty-three proper sea- 
sonings for a midsummer dinner. Ked- 
rigem heavily oversalted his meat, 
drank an inordinate amount of wine to 
slake his thirst, and fell grumpily 
asleep just after sundown, to the 
strains of an elegiac song. 

The next day he spent in the wood 
nearby, stocking up on necessaries of 
his profession. He left early and return- 
ed late, well past dinner time, and thus 
was audience only to a long lament 
concerning the tribulations of one Ba- 
rach of the Tiny Foot, who had delay- 
ed a great queen's dinner and suffered 
much for it. He found himself with a 
mild headache. 

For the next three days it rained, 
hard. Confined to the house, unable to 
remain long in his study, where the hu- 
midity was practically sub-aquatic, 
Kedrigem listened all day, each day. 
He noticed that Spot had tucked in his 
ears and taken to entering rooms cau- 
tiously and fleeing at the sight of Prin- 
cesfe. 

Kedrigem- began to long for the 
sound of a soft "Brereep." He found 
himself pondering counterenchant- 
ments to neutralize Princess' medal- 
lion; even of stealing it as she slept. But 
these were dangerous courses, both to 
himself and to her. He had placed the 
medallion around her neck, and that 
was a deed not easily undone. He had 
certain responsibilities in the matter. 

As a further complication. Princess 


seemed quite content with her new- 
found multiloquence, and he doubted 
that he could bring himself to deprive 
her of it. Talky she might be, but he 
loved her still. 

On the first dry morning he awoke 
early, to blessed quiet. For a time, not 
even a bird peeped. Kedrigem drank in 
the sweet silence contentedly, knowing 
that it would end all too soon. 

He raised himself slowly, stealthily, 
and leaning on one elbow he looked 
down on Princess. Her dark hair lay 
like a pool of night around her fair 
face. Her coral lips were slightly 
parted, and her breath was slow and 
regular. She was absolutely silent. 
Princess looked especially lovely this 
morning, and Kedrigem, forgetful of 
all else, reached out to take her in his 
arms. 

But he hesitated when his fingertips 
were a scant hand's-breadth from her 
shoulder. He wanted to make love to 
Princess, with no more conversation 
than was necessary or fitting, as they 
had always done — and he feared that 
instead of her sweet sighs he would 
hear still another tale of mighty- 
thewed heroes and long-suffering dam- 
sels, narrated in a manner more suited 
to a maundering old sagaman than to 
the fair lips of Princess. 

As he held his hand poised over her 
fair shoulder, wavering, she stirred, 
opened her eyes, and looked directly at 
him. Startled, he drew back his hand. 

'Troubled were my dreams last 
night, Kedrigem my husband, and 


The Gifts Of Conhoon 


55 


troubled my sleep as the sleep of Drai- 
gen of the Bloodshot Eyes/' She yawn- 
ed and went on: 'Tor seven distinct 
dreams did I have, and all of them fill- 
ed with omens that would make the 
hairs of your head to stand up like 
thorns and your blood to run as cold as 
the brook of Killfillen in the spring- 
time, when the melting snows pour 
down the stony flanks of the Hills of 
Musheele. Tremble 1 did, and cry out, 
and try to flee, but my voice was taken 
from me and my feet as still as stone/' 

"Probably something you ate, my 
dear," said Kedrigem, slipping from 
the bed. "I noticed an odd tang to the 
gravy last evening. Perhaps Spot — " 

"It is not gravy that filled me with 
terror, and I would think the better of 
you if you did not flee like the hinds of 
Sliabh Luachra at the sight of Finn' 
Quick-Spear every time I open my 
mouth to speak," Princess broke in 
coldly. 

Kedrigem bit his lip and said noth- 
ing. Princess looked at him darkly and 
disapprovingly for a time, then drew a 
deep breath preparatory to resuming 
her narrative. At that moment a loud 
knock at the front door echoed 
through the house. 

"I will go," said Kedrigem, quickly 
pulling on his robe. 

"You will stay and hear me. Spot it 
is who answers the door in this house." 

The knock resounded again, ac- 
companied by indistinct but angry- 
sounding shouts from below. 

"There's a bad lot about these days. 


and that was not a friendly knock. I'm 
going," said Kedrigem. 

Working a quick spell against bodi- 
ly harm, he stalked to the door, drew 
the bolts, and flung it back. At the 
sight of a familiar figure, he gasped and 
started back. Before him stood a bald 
old man, white-bearded, untidily 
dressed, a dirty blood-stained rag 
binding his crown and an expression of 
great anger on his face. 

"ConhoonI You're alive!?" Kedri- 
gem cried. 

"I am, and I want my medallion," 
said the visitor, raising his knobby 
walking stick in a menacing gesture. 

"Ah, yes. Your medallion. Come 
in, Conhoon, we were just about to 
have breakfast. Would you like — " 

"I would like my medallion, and no 
bloody foolishness from you." 

"Of course. I understand complete- 
ly. Come in and have a cup of tea, and 
we'll come to an amicable solution." 

"To hell with an amicable solution! I 
want my medallion!" Conhoon howled. 

At that moment. Princess ap- 
peared. She wore a gown of deep 
green. Her hair hung lose about her 
shoulders, and the medallion glistened 
like a star on her breast. When he saw 
it, Conhoon's eyes widened and he 
began to sputter. Kedrigem quickly 
made introductions. 

"My dear, this is Conhoon of the 
Three Gifts. Conhoon, this is my wife. 
Princess. Conhoon is a colleague of 
mine, my dear, and we — " 

"Would you leave the dear man 


56 


Fantasy & Science Fiction 


standing out in the hot sun, and him 
with a bandage to his head and no food 
in his poor stomach? Come in, my fine 
Conhoon, come in to the cool and a 
cup of tea," Princess said sweetly. 

"I thank you, lady, but it's for the 
medallion I've come, and if you'll be 
giving it to me, I'l be on my way," said 
Conhoon, more gently. 

"It is a fine medallion," said Prin- 
cess thoughtfully. 

"It is, and sorry am I to be without 
it." 

"How did you come to lose it?" 
Kedrigem asked. 

"Devil a thing I know about that. 
One minute Tm dozing off in my 
garden, weak and exhausted from a 
spell to rid three counties of mice and 
moles, and the next thing I know I 
have a dent in my skull and a headache 
to make the eyes hop around in my 
head, and my house all tom to pieces 
and my medallion gone. Fortunate I 
am to be Conhoon of the Three Gifts, 
and my three gifts sweetness of the 
tongue, keenness of the memory, and 
hardness of the head. And if I find the 
bugger who laid me out, he will need a 
harder head than mine or we will hear 
no more from him." 

"He already has a harder head," 
Kedrigem said. "I turned him to 
stone." 

"Well, now, that was good of 
you, "said Conhoon, almost gracious- 
ly. "And so I will take my medallion 
and go." 

"Fond have I grown of this medal- 
The Gifts Of Conhoon 


lion," said Princess softly, touching the 
silver disc with her fingertips. "And I 
think that if I wished to keep it, my 
dear Kedrigem would come to my aid 
against any sorcerer or wizard or fel- 
lowship thereof...." 

"Oh dear me," murmured Kedri- 
gern. 

"...but I would not cause such a 
bitter conflict in his soul," Princess 
went on. "My Kedrigem, my beautiful 
one, my beloved,' she crooned. "Fair 
he was in his youth, fair the hair and 
the brows of him, and smooth the skin 
of him, and long and slender the hands 
of him and clean the fingers thereof. 
Like blood on the breast of a white 
dove was the redness of his lips. Like 
red gold after the burnishing was his 
hair, and like cornflowers the blue of 
his far-seeing eyes. Smooth and soft as 
wool his skin, and straight his shins, 
and round and hard the knees of him 
as two wave-washed seashells." 

"Why, thank you, my dear. Very 
nice of you to say so," said Kedrigem, 
a bit embarrassed but greatly pleased 
at her words. 

"But the years have passed, and 
their passing has been heavy on my 
Kedrigem, the wise one, the once-fair. 
Gray as the dust under our sagging bed 
is rapidly turning the hair of him, and 
the lines of his face are as deep as the 
gullies in the hillsides of Musheele after 
the torrents of spring have dropped 
from the skies. Around his eyes the 
tiny lines are as numerous as the hairs 
on the heads of all the warriors who—" 

57 


"You needn't go on, my dear, Con- 
hoon doesn't want to hear—" 

"I will go on," said Princess implac- 
ably. "Around his eyes — " 

"For the love of God, woman, will 
you give me my medallion?!" cried 
Conhoon in an agony of impatience. 

Princess paused. She looked fondly 
at Kedrigem; then she took the medal- 
lion in both hands. "I am loath to lose 
this lovely medallion and the power of 
fine speech it gave to me, and saddened 
by the thought of once more being 
forced to croak like a frog in response 
to intelligent and subtle questions. And 
I am saddened in nine distinct ways. 
But I will say no more." And lifting the 
medallion from around her neck, she 
placed it in Conhoon's outstretched 
hands. 

hat evening. Princess and Kedri- 
gem dined in the coolness of the arbor, 
under the great oak. When Spot had 
cleared the things away, Kedrigem 


reached over to take Princess' hand in 
his. 

"You did a fine, generous thing this 
morning," he said. "I promise you, my 
dear, that I will do everything in my 
power to complete the reversal of your 
spell. It's my absolute top priority." 

She smiled at him. He squeezed her 
hand and went on. "There was one 
thing I wanted to ask you when you 
could speak at somewhat greater 
length, but in all the excitement it com- 
pletely slipped my mind. Now 1 sup- 
pose I'll just have to wait." 

She raised an eyebrow in inquiry. 

"Oh, it's about ... about before. 
Your old life, before you were turned 
into a toad. I've always been curious 
about what you did, and where you 
lived, and what friends you had." He 
sighed. "Now I suppose I'll just have to 
wait." 

She nodded solemnly, and, very 
slowly, she winked. "Brereep," she 
said. 



58 


Fantasy & Science Fiction 


SF has produced a small and interesting body of work about the 
automobile, to which we can now add John KesseVs reductio ad 
absurdum account of David Baker (bom in the back seat of his 
parents westbound Chevy) and other heroes of the road. 


Not Responsible! 
Park and Lock It! 


D 


BY 

JOHN KESSEL 

(with thanks to Tim Roth) 


I avid Baker was bom in the 
back seat ot his parents' Chevy in the 
great mechanized lot at mile 1.375 x 
1025 Y/e need to stop," his 

mother Polly had said. "Fm having 
pains." She was a week early. 

They had been cruising along pret- 
ty well at twilight, his father concen- 
trating on getting in another fifty miles 
before dark, when they'd been cut off 
by the big two- toned Mercury and 
George had had to swerve four lanes 
over into the far-right. George and 
Polly later decided that the near-acci- 
dent was the cause of the premature 
birth. They even managed to laugh at 
the incident in retrospect — they rue- 
fully retold the story many times, so 
that it was one of the family fables 
David grew up with — but David al- 
ways suspected his father pined after 
those lost fifty miles. In return he'd 
gotten a son. 


"Not responsible! Park and lock 
it!" the loudspeakers at the tops of the 
poles in the vast asphalt field of the lot 
shouted, over and over. For a first 
birth, Polly's labor was surprisingly 
short and painless, and the robot doc- 
tor emerged from the Chevy in the 
gathering evening with a healthy, 
seven-pound boy. George Baker flip- 
ped his cigarette away nervously, the 
butt glowing as it spun into the night. 
He smiled. 

In the morning George stepped into 
the bar at the first rest stop, had a 
quick one, and registered his name: 
David John Baker. Bom 8:15 Standard 
Westbound Time, June 13.... 

"What year is it?" George asked the 
attendant. 

"802,701." The robot smiled be- 
nignly. It could not do otherwise. 

"802,701." George repeated it 
aloud and punched the keys of the ter- 


Not Responsible! Park and Lock It! 


59 



minal. "Eight hundred two thousand, 
seven hundred and one." The numbers 
spun themselves out like a song. Eight- 
oh-two, seven-oh-one. 

David's mother had smiled weakly, 
reclining in the passenger's seat, when 
they started up again. Her smile had 
never been strong. David slept on her 
breast. 

Much later Polly told David what a 
good baby he'd been, not like his 
younger sister Caroline, who squalled 
and spit up and had the colic. David 
took satisfaction in that: he was the 
good one. It made the competition be- 
tween him and Caroline even more in- 
tense. But that was later. As a baby 
David slept to the steady thrumming of 
the V-8 engine, the gentle rocking of 
the car. He was cooed at by the an- 
droid attendants at the camps where 
they pulled over at the end of the day. 
His father would chat with the ma- 
chine that came over to check the 
odometer and validate their mileage 
card. George would tell about any of 
the interesting things that had happen- 
ed on the road — and he always seem- 
ed to haye something — while Polly 
fixed supper at one of the grills and the 
ladies from the other cars sat around in 
a circle in front of the komfy kabins 
and talked about their children, their 
husbands, about their pregnancies and 
how often they got to drive. David sat 
on Polly's lap or played with the other 
kids. Once past the toddler stage he 
followed his dad around and watched, 
a little scared, as the greasy, self-assur- 


ed robots busied themselves single- 
mindedly around the service station. 
They were large and composed. The 
young single drivers tried hard to com- 
pete with their mechanical self-con- 
tainment. David hung on everything 
his dad said. 

"The common driving man," George 
Baker said, hands on the wheel, "the 
good average driver — doesn't know 
his ass from a tailpipe." 

Polly would draw David to her, as 
if to blot out the words. "George...." 

"All right. The kid will know 
whether you or I want him to or not." 

But David didn't know, and they 
wouldn't tell him. That was the way of 
parents: they never told you even 
when they thought they were explain- 
ing everything, and so David was left 
to wonder and learn as best he could. 
He watched the land speed by long be- 
fore he had words to say what he saw; 
he listened to his father tell his mother 
what she should or should not do, and 
what was wrong and right with the 
world. And the sun set every night at 
the other end of that world, far ahead 
of them still, beyond the gas stations 
and the wash and brush-up buildings 
and the quietly deferential androids 
that always seemed the same no matter 
how far they'd gone that day. West- 
bound. 

'This is the worst stretch of plains 
highway I've seen in my entire life. 
Maybe when I was seven we had a 
worse stretch, but there's no excuse for 
it. Look at those droids. It's a wonder 


60 


Fantasy & Science Fiction 


the shoulders aren't lined with wrecks, 
given the state they've let the roads 
come to." His voice would trail off 
from bluster to wistfulness. 

When David was six he got to sit on 
George's lap and hold the wheel in his 
hands and "drive the car." With what 
great chasms of anticipation and awe 
had he looked forward to those mo- 
ments. His father would say suddenly, 
after hours of driving in silence, 
"Come sit on my lap, David. You can 
drive." 

Polly would protest feebly that he 
was too young and it was dangerous. 
Fumbling and cautious, watching the 
road and the other cars, David would 
clamber into his dad's lap and grab the 
wheel. How warm it felt, how large, 
and how far apart he had to put his 
hands! The little ridges on the back of 
the wheef were too far apart for his fin- 
gers, so that two of his fit into the 
space meant for one adult's. George 
would move the seat up and scrunch 
his thin legs together so that David 
could see over the hood of the car. His 
father operated the pedals and gear- 
shift, and most of the time he kept his 
left hand on the wheel too — but then 
he would slowly take it away, and 
David would be steering all by himself. 
His heart had beaten fast. At those mo- 
ments the car seemed so large. The 
promise and threat of its speed had 
been almost overwhelming. Knowing 
that by a turn of the wheel you could 
be in the high-speed lanes; knowing, 
even more amazingly, that he, David, 


held in his hands the potential to steer 
them off the road, into the gully and 
fences, and death. The responsibility 
was great, and David took it seriously. 
He didn't want to do anything foolish; 
he didn't want to make George think 
him any less a man. He knew his moth- 
er was watching, whether with love or 
fear in her eyes he could not know, be- 
cause he couldn't take his eyes from the 
road to see. 

When David was seven there was a 
song on the radio that Polly sang to 
him, "We all drive on." That was his 
song. David sang it back to her, and 
his father laughed and sang it too, bad- 
ly, voice hoarse and off-key, not like 
his mother whose voice was sweet and 
pure. "We all drive on," they sang to- 
gether, "You and me and everyone/ 
Never ending, just begxm/ Driving, 
driving on." 

"Goddamn right we drive on," 
George said. "Goddamn pack of man- 
iacs." 

David remembered clearly the first 
time he became aware of the Knapsack 
and the Notebook. It was one evening 
after they'd eaten supper and were 
waiting for Polly to get the cabin ready 
for bed. George had gone around to 
the trunk to check the spare, and this 
time he took a green knapsack out and, 
in the darkness near the edge of the 
campground, secretively opened it. 

"Watch, David, and keep your 
mouth shut about what you see." 

David watched. 

"This is for emergencies." George, 


Not Responsible! Park and Lock It! 


61 


one by one, set the things on the 
ground: first a rolled oilcloth which he 
spread out, then a line of tools, then a 
gun and boxes of bullets, a first-aid kit, 
some packages of crackers and dried 
fruit, and some things David didn't 
know. One thing had a light and a 
thick wire and batteries in it. 

"This is a metal detector, David. I 
made it myself." George took a black 
book from the sack. "This is my note- 
book." He handed it to David. It was 
heavy and smelled of the trunk. 

"Maps of the Median, and...." 

"George I" Polly's voice was a harsh 
whisper, and David jumped a foot. She 
grabbed his arm. George looked exas- 
perated and a little guilty — though 
David did not identify his father's reac- 
tion as guilt until he thought about it 
much later. He was too busy trying to 
avoid the licking he thought was com- 
ing. 

His mother marched him back to 
the car after giving George her best 
withering gaze. 

"But, mom...." 

'To sleep! Don't puzzle yourself 
about things you aren't meant to 
know, young man." 

David puzzled himself. At times the 
Knapsack and the Notebook filled his 
thoughts. His father would give him a 
curious glance and tantalizingly vague 
answers whenever he asked about 
them safely out of earshot of Polly. 

Shortly after that, Caroline was 
bom. This time the Bakers were not 
caught by surprise, and Caroline came 


squawling into the world at the hospi- 
tal at mile 1.375 x 10“ where they 
stopped for three whole days for 
Polly's lying in. Nobody stopped for 
three whole days, for anything. David 
was impatient. They'd never get any- 
where waiting, and the androids in the 
hospital were all boring, and the comic 
books in the waiting room, with its 
deadly silence 4nd no vibrations, he 
had all read before. 

This time the birth was a hard one. 
George sat hunched forward in a plas- 
tic chair, and David paced around, 
stomping on the cracks in the 
linoleum. He leaned on the dirty win- 
dowsill and watched all the cars fly by 
on the highway. Westbound, and in 
the distance, beyond the barbed wire, 
sently towers and minefields, myster- 
ious, ever unattainable — Eastbound. 

After what s^med like a very long 
time, the white porcelain doctoroid 
came back to them. George stood up as 
soon as he appeared. "Is she...?" 

"Both fine. A little girl. Seven 
pounds, five ounces," the doctoroid re- 
ported, grille gleaming. 

George didn't say anything then, 
just sat down in the chair. After a 
while he came over to David, put his 
hand on tlje boy's shoulder, and they 
both watched the cars moving by, the 
light of the bright midsummer's sun 
flashing off the windshields as they 
passed, blinding them. 

I avid was nine when they bought 


62 


Fantasy & Science Fiction 


the Nash, and it had a big chrome grille 
that stretched like a bridge across the 
front, the vertical bars bulging out- 
ward in the middle, so that, with the 
headlights, the car looked to be grin- 
ning a big grin, a nasty grin. 

David went with George through 
the car lot while Polly sat with Caro- 
line in the lounge of the dealership. He 
watched his father dicker with the 
bow-tied sales droid. George acted as if 
he seriously meant to buy a new car, 
when in fact his yearly mileage average 
would entitle him to no more than a 
second-hand, second-rank sedan, un- 
less he intended for them all to go hun- 
gry. He wouldn't have done that, how- 
ever. Whatever else Polly might say 
about her husband, she could not say 
he ever failed to be a good provider. 

"So why don't you show us a good 
used car," George said, running his 
hand through his thinning hair. "Mind 
you, don't show us any piece of junk." 

The sales droid was, like his broth- 
ers, enthusiastic and unreadable. "Got 
just the little thing for you, Mr. Baker 
— a snappy number. C'mon." it said, 
rolling down toward the back of the 
lot. 

"Here you go." It opened the door 
of the blue Nash with its amazingly 
dexterous hand. David's father got in. 
"Feel that genuine vinyl upholstery. 
Not none of your cheap plastics, that'll 
crack in a week t>f direct sun." The 
sales droid winked its glassy eye at 
David. "Hop in, son. See how you like 
it." 


David started to, then saw the look 
of warning on George's face. "No, 
thanks," he said. 

"Let's have a look at the engine," 
George said. 

"Righto." The droid rolled around 
the fat front fender, reached through 
the grille and tripped the latch with a 
loud "clunk." The engine was clean as 
a whistle, the cylinder heads painted a 
nice cherry red, the spark plug leads 
numbered for easy changes. It was like 
the pictures out of David's school- 
books. 

The droid started up the Nash; the 
motor gave out a rumble and vibrated 
ever so slightly. David smelled the 
clean tang of evaporating gasoline. 

"Only one owner," the droid said, 
volume turned up now so it could be 
heard over the sound of the engine. 

George looked uncertain. 

"How much?" 

"Book says it's worth 200,000 vali- 
dated miles. You can drive her out, 
with your Chevy in trade, for ... let me 
calculate ... 174,900." 

Just then David noticed something 
in the engine compartment. On either 
side over the wheel wells there were 
cracks in the metal that had been paint- 
ed over so you could only see them 
from the reflection of the sunlight 
where the angle of the surface changed. 
That was where the shocks connected 
up with the car's body. 

He tugged at his father's sleeve. 
"Dad," he said, pointing. 

George ran his hand over the metal. 


Not Responsible! Park and Lock It! 


63 


He looked serious, then David thought 
he was going to get mad. Instead he 
straightened up and smiled. 

'"How much did you say?" 

The android stood stock still. 
"150,000 miles." 

"But, dad — " 

"Shut up, David," he said curtly. 
"I'll tell you what, Mr. Sixty. 100,000. 
And you reweld those wheel wells be- 
fore we drive it an inch." 

That was how they bought the 
Nash. The first thing George said when 
they were on their way again was, 
"Polly, that boy of ours is smart as a 
whip. The shocks were about to rip 
through the bodywork, and we'd've 
been scraping down the highway with 
our nose to the ground like a basset. 
David, you're a bom driver, or else too 
smart to waste yourself on it." 

David didn't quite follow that, but 
it made him a little more content to 
move into the back seat. At first he re- 
sented it that Caroline had taken his 
place in the front. She got all the atten- 
tion, and David only got to sit and 
look out at where they had been, or 
what they were going by, never getting 
a good look at where they were going. 
If he leaned over the back of the front 
seat, his father would say, "Quit 
breathing down my neck, David. Sit 
down and behave yourself. Do your 
homework." 

After a while he wouldn't have 
moved into the front if they'd asked 
him to: only babies did that. Instead he 
watched raptly out the left-side win- 


dow for fleeting glimpses of East- 
bound, wondering always about what 
it was, how it got there, and about the 
no-man's land and the people they said 
had died trying to cross. He asked 
George about it, and that started up 
the biggest thing they were ever to 
share together. 

"They've told you about East- 
bound in school, have they?" 

"They told us we can't go there. 
Nobody can." 

"Did they tell you why?" 

"No." 

His father laughed. "That's because 
they don't know why I Isn't that incred- 
ible, David? They teach a thing in 
school, and everybody believes it, and 
nobody knows why or even thinks to 
ask. But you wonder, don't you? I've 
seen it." 

He did wonder. It amazed and 
scared him that his father would talk 
about it. 

"Men are slip-streamers, David. 
Did you ever see a car follow close be- 
hind a big tmck to take advantage of 
the windbreak to make the driving eas- 
ier? That's the way people are. They'll ^ 
follow so close they can't see six inches 
beyond their noses as long as it makes 
things easier. And the schools and the 
teachers are the biggest windbreaks of 
all. You remember that. 

"Do you remember the knapsack in 
the tmnk?" 

"George," Polly warned. 

"Be quiet, Polly. The boy's growing 
up." To David he said, "You know 


64 


Fantasy it Science Fiction 


what it's for. You know what's inside." 

"To go across...." David hesitated, 
his heart leaping. 

"To cross the Median! We can do 
it. We don't have to be like everybody 
else, and when the time comes, when 
we need to get away the most, when 
things are really bad — we can do it! 
I'm prepared to do it." 

Polly tried to shush him, and it be- 
came an argument. But David was 
thrilled at the new world that had 
opened. His father was a criminal — 
but he was right! From then on they 
worked on the preparations together. 
They would have long talks on what 
they would do and how they would do 
it. David drew maps on graph paper, 
and sometimes he and George would 
climb to the highest spot available by 
the roadside at the day's end, to puzzle 
out once again the defenses of the 
Median. 

"Don't tell your mother about 
this," George would say. "You know 
she doesn't understand." 

Each morning, before they had 
gone very far at all, David's father 
would stop the car and let David out at 
a bus stop to be picked up by the 
school bus, and eight hours later the 
bus would let him out again some hun- 
dreds of miles farther west, and soon 
his parents would be there to pick him 
up, if they were not there already 
when he got off with the other kids. 
More than once David overheard driv- 
ers at the camps in the evening com- 


plaining about how having kids really 
slowed a man down in his career, so 
he'd never get as far as he would have 
if he'd had the sense to stay single. 
Whenever some young man whined 
about waiting around half his life for a 
school bus, George Baker would only 
light another cigarette and be very 
quiet. 

In school David learned about the 
principles of the internal combustion 
engine. Internal Combustion was his 
favorite class. Other boys and girls 
would shoot paperclips at each other 
over the back seats of the bus, or fall 
asleep staring out the windows, but 
David sat in a middle seat (he would 
not move to the front and be accused 
of being teacher's pet) and for the most 
part, paid good attention. His favorite 
textbook was one they used both in 
history and social studies; it had a blue 
cloth cover, the pages scrawled on and 
dog-eared. The title, pressed into the 
cover in faded yellow, was Heroes of 
the Roads. On the bus, during recess, 
David and the other boys argued about 
who was the greatest driver of them 
all. 

To most of them Alan "Lucky" 
Totter was the only driver. He'd made 
10,220,796 miles when he tried to pass 
that Winnebago on the right at 85 
miles per hour in a blinding snow- 
storm. Some people thought that 
showed a lack of judgment, but Lucky 
Totter didn't give a damn for judg- 
ment, or anything else. Totter was the 
classic lone-wolf driver. Bom to re- 


Not Responsible! Park and Lock It! 


65 


spectable middle-class parents who 
drove a Buick with holes in its sides. 
Totter devoured all he could find out 
about cars. At the age of 13 he deserted 
his parents at a rest stop at mile 1.375 x 
10^, hot-wired a hopped-up Buggatti- 
Smith which the owner had left un- 
locked and made 8,000 miles before the 
Trooperbots brought him to justice. 
After six months in the paddy wagon 
he came out with a new resolve, work- 
ed for a month at a service station at 
jobs even the androids would shun, 
getting nowhere. At the end of that 
time he'd rebuilt a serviceable Whippet 
roadster and was on his way, hell bent 
for leather. Every extra mile he could 
squeeze out of his many hot cars he 
squeezed, and every mile he drove he 
plowed back into financing a newer 
and faster car. Tirelessly, it seemed. 
Totter kept his two-tones to the floor- 
boards, and the pavement fairly flew 
beneath his wheels. No time for a wife 
or family, 1,(XX) miles a day was his 
only satisfaction, other than the quick 
comforts of any of the fast women he 
ought pick up who wanted a chance to 
say they'd been for a ride with Lucky 
Totter. The solitary male to the end, it 
was a style guaranteed to earn him the 
hero-worship of boys all along the 
world. 

But Totter was not the all-time mil- 
eage champion. That pinnacle of glory 
was held by Charles Van Huyser, at a 
seemingly unassailable 11,315,201 
miles. It was hard to see how anyone 
could do better, for Van Huyser was 


the driver who had everything: good 
reflexes, a keen eye, iron constitution, 
wherewithal, and devilish good looks. 
He was a child of the privileged classes, 
scion of the famous Van Huyser driv- 
ers, and had enjoyed all the advantages 
the boys on a middle-lane bus like 
David's would never see. His father 
had been one of the premier drivers of 
his generation and had made more 
than seven million miles himself, plac- 
ing him a respectable twelfth on the all- 
time list. Van Huyser rode the most ex- 
clusive of preparatory buses and was 
outfitted from the begiiuiing with the 
best made-to-order Mercedes that an- 
droid hands could fashion. He was in a 
lane by himself. Old-timers would tell 
stories of the time they had been pass- 
ed by the Van Huyser limo and the dis- 
tinguished, immaculately tailored man 
who sat behind the wheel. Perhaps he 
had even tipped his homburg as he 
flashed by. Spartan in his daily regi- 
men, invariably kind, if a little conde- 
scending, to lesser drivers, he never 
forgot his position in society, and died 
at the respectable age of 86, peacefully, 
in the private washroom of the Driv- 
ers' Club Dining Room at mile 1.375 x 
10 “ 

There were scores of others in Her- 
oes of the Roads, all of their stories in- 
spiring, challenging, even puzzling. 
There was Ailene Stanford, at six-mil- 
lion-plus miles the greatest female driv- 
er ever, carmaker and mother and 
credit to her sex. And Reuben Jeffer- 
son, and the Kosciusco brothers, and 


66 


Fantasy A Science Fiction 


the mysterious eastern trance driving 
of Akiro Tedeki. The chapter "'De- 
tours'" held frightening tales of abject 
failure — and of those who had wasted 
their substance and their lives trying to 
cross the Median. 

"You can't believe everything you 
read, David," George told him. 
"They'll tell you Steve Macready was a 
great man." 

It was like George Baker to make 
statements like that to David and then 
never explain what he meant. It got on 
David's nerves sometimes, though he 
figured his dad did it because he had 
more important things on his mind. 

But Steve Macready was David's 
personal favorite of the drivers he'd 
read about. Macready was third on the 
all-time list behind Van Huyser and 
Totter, at 8,444,892 miles. Macready 
hadn't had the advantages of Van 
Huyser, and he scorned the reckless ir- 
responsibility of Totter. He was an av- 
erage man, to all intents and purposes, 
and he showed just how much an av- 
erage guy could do if he had the will 
power and nothing more. Bom into an 
impoverished hundred-mile-a-day 
family that couldn't seem to keep a car 
on the road three days in a row before 
it broke down, one of eight brothers 
and sisters, Macready studied quietly 
when he could, watched the ways of 
the road with an intelligent and unflag- 
ging eye, and helped his father and 
mother try to keep the family rolling. 
Compelled to leave school early be- 
cause the family couldn't keep up with 


the slowest of regular school buses, he 
worked on his own, managed to get 
hold of an old junker that he put on the 
road, and set off at the age of 16, tak- 
ing two of his sisters with him. In those 
first years his mileage totals were any- 
thing but spectacular. But he kept 
plugging away, four to six hundred 
miles a day, then seven when he could 
move to a newer used car, taking care 
of his sisters, seeing them married off 
to two respectable young drivers along 
the way, never hurrying. At the com- 
paratively late age of 30 he married a 
simple girl from a family of Ford own- 
ers and fathered four children. He saw 
to his boys' educations. He drove on, 
making a steady 500 miles a day, and 
200 on each Saturday and Sunday. He 
did not push himself or his machine; he 
did not lag behind. Steadiness was his 
watchword. His sons grew up to be 
fine drivers themselves, always ready 
to lend the helping hand to the unfor- 
tunate motorist. When he died at the 
age of 82, survived by his wife, chil- 
dren, eighteen grandchildren and 
twenty-six great-grandchildren, driv- 
ers all, he had become something of a 
legend in his own quiet time. Steve 
Macready. 

George Baker never said much 
when David talked about the argu- 
ments the kids had over Macready and 
the other drivers. When he talked 
about his own upbringing, he would 
give only the most tantalizing hints of 
the many cars he Jiad driven before he 
picked up Polly, of the many places 


Not Responsible! Park and Lock It! 


67 


he'd stopped and people he'd ridden 
with. David's grandfather had been 
something of an inventor, he gathered, 
and had modified his pickup with an 
extra-large tank and a small, efficient 
engine to get the most mileage for his 
driving time. George didn't say much 
about his mother or brothers, though 
he said some things that indicated that 
his father's plans for big miles never 
panned out, for some undisclosed rea- 
son, and about how it was not always 
pleasant to ride in the back of an open 
pickup with three brothers and a sick 
mother. 

Eventually David saw that the 
miles were taking something out of his 
father. George Baker conversed less 
with Polly and the kids, and talked 
more at them. 

Once in a heavy rainstorm after 
three days of rolling hill country, for- 
ests that encroached on the very edges 
of the pavement and fell like a dark 
wall between Westbound and forgot- 
ten Eastbound, the front end of the 
Nash had jumped suddenly into a mad 
vibration that jerked them two lanes 
over and set up a loud knocking that 
threw David's heart into his throat. 

"George!" Polly shouted, and 
George hunched up over the wheel, 
trying to slow down and steer the 
bucking car to the roadside. "Shut up!" 
he yelled. 

And they were stopped, and breath- 
ing heavily, and the only sound was 
the drumming of the rain, the ticking 
of the car as it settled into motionless- 


ness, and the hissing of the cars that 
still sped by them over the wet pave- 
ment. David's father, slow and bear- 
like, opened the door and pulled him- 
self out of the car. David got out too. 
Under the hood they saw where the re- 
welded wheel well had given way, and 
the shock was ripping through the 
metal. 

"Shit!" George said. 

As they stood there a gunmetal- 
gray Mercedes pulled over to stop be- 
hind them, its flashing amber signal 
warm as fire under the leaden skies and 
overhanging trees. A stocky man in a 
leather raincoat got out. 

"Perhaps I can help you?" he asked. 

George Baker stared at him for a 
good ten seconds. He looked back at 
the Mercedes, looked at the man again. 

"No, thank you," he said very 
coldly. 

The man hesitated a moment, then 
turned, went back to his car, and 
drove off. 

So they had to wait three hours in 
the broken-down Nash as darkness fell 
and George trudged off down the high- 
way for the next rest stop or until he 
was picked up by a cruising repair 
truck. He returned with an android 
serviceman and they were towed to the 
nearest station. David, never patient at 
his best, grew more and more angry. 
His father offered not a word of ex- 
planation, and his mother tried to keep 
David from getting after him about his 
stupid refusal of help. But David final- 
ly challenged George on the plain stu- 


68 


Fantasy & Science Fiction 


pidily of his action, which would mys- 
tify any sensible driver. 

At first George acted as if he didn't 
hear David. Then he exploded. 

"Don't tell me about sensible driv- 
ers! I don't need it, David! Don't tell 
me about your Van Huysers, and don't 
give me any of that Steve Macready 
crap either. Your Van Huysers never 
did anything for the common driving 
man, despite all their extra miles. No- 
body gives it away. That's just the way 
this road works." 

"What about Macready?" David 
asked. He didn't understand what his 
father was talking about. You didn't 
have to run someone else down in 
order to be right. "Look what Mac- 
ready did." 

"You don't know what you're talk- 
ing about," George said. "You get old- 
er but you still think like a kid. Mac- 
ready sucked up to every tinman on 
the road. I wouldn't stoop so low as 
that. Half the time he let his wife drive! 
They don't tell you about that in that 
damn school, do they? 

"Wake up and look at this road the 
way it is, David. People will use you 
like a chamois if you don't. Take my 
word for it. Damn it! If I could just get 
a couple of good months out of this 
heap and get back on my feet. A cou- 
ple of good months!" He laughed 
scornfully. 

It was no good arguing with George 
when he was in that mood. David shut 
up, inwardly fuming. 

"Follow the herd!" George was 


shouting now. 'That's all people ever 
do. Never had an original thought in 
their life." 

"George, you don't need to shout 
at the boy," Polly said timidly. 

"Shout! I'm not shouting!" he 
shouted. George looked at her as if she 
were a hitchhiker. "Why don't you 
shut up. The boy and I were just hav- 
ing an intelligent conversation. A fat 
lot you know about it." His hands 
gripped the wheel as if he meant to 
grind it into powder. A deadly silence 
ensued. 

"I need to stop," he said a couple of 
miles later, pulling off the road into a 
bar and grill. 

They sat in the silent car, ears ring- 
ing. 

"I'm hungry," Caroline said. 

"Let's get something to eat, then." 
Polly seemed to leap at the opportun- 
ity to do something normal. "Come 
on, David. Let's go in." 

"You go ahead. I'll be in in a min- 
ute." 

After they left, David stared out 
the car window for a while. He reached 
under the seat and took out the note- 
book, which he had moved there a 
long time before. The spine was almost 
broken through now, with some of the 
leaves loose and water-stained. The 
paper was worn with writing and re- 
writing to the point where it felt like 
parchment. David leafed idly through 
the sketches of watchtowers, the maps, 
the calculations. In the margin of page 
six his father had written, in handwrit- 


Not Responsible! Park and Lock It! 


69 


ing so faded now that it was like the 
pale voice of years, asking from very 
far away, "What purpose?" 

li^Javid was sixteen. His knees were 
crowded by the back of the car's front 
seat, and he stared sullenly out the 
window at the rolling countryside and 
the gathering night. Caroline, having 
just completed her fight with him with 
a belligerent "oh, yeah!” was leaning 
forward, her forearms flat against the 
top of the front seat, her chin resting 
on them as she stared grimly ahead. 
Polly near-sightedly was knitting a 
cover for the box' of kleenex that rested 
on the dashboard, muffling the radio 
speaker. 

"I'm tired," George said. "I'm going 
to stop here for a quick one." He pull- 
ed the ancient Nash over into the exit 
lane, downshifted, and the car lurched 
forward more slowly, the engine rat- 
tling loudly in protest of the increased 
rpm's. David could have done better 
himself. 

They pulled into the parking lot of 
Fast Ed's Bar and Grill. "You go back 
and order a fish fry," George said, 
slamming the car door and turning his 
back to them. Polly put aside the knit- 
ting, picked up her purse and took 
them in the side door to the cheap din- 
ing room. There was no one else there, 
but they could hear the TV and the 
loud conversation from the bar up 
front. After a while a waitress robot 
rolled back to them. Its porcelain finish 


was chipped and the hands were stain- 
ed rusty brown, like an old bathtub. 

They ordered, the food came, and 
they ate. Still George did not return 
from the bar. 

"Go get your father, David," his 
mother said. He knew she was mad. 

"I'll go, ma," Caroline said. 

"Stay still I It's bad enough he takes 
us to his gin mills, without you becom- 
ing the drunkard's pet. Go ahead, 
David." 

David went to the barroom. His 
father was sitting at the far end of the 
bar, near the front windows that faced 
the highway. The late afternoon sun 
gleamed along the polished wood, 
glinted harshly from the bottles racked 
on the shelves behind it, turned the 
mirror against the wall and the brass 
spigots of the beer taps into fire. 
George Baker was talking loudly with 
two other middle-aged drivers. His legs 
looked amazingly scrawny as he perch- 
ed on the stool. Suddenly David was 
very angry. 

"Are you going to come and eat?" 
he demanded loudly. 

George turned clumsily to him, his 
sloppy good humor stiffening to ire. 

"What do you want?" 

"We're eating. Mom's waiting." 

He leaned over to the man on the 
next stool. "See what I mean?" he said 
lowly. To David he said, much more 
boldly, "Go and eat. I'm not hungry." 
He picked up his shot, downed it in 
one swallow, and took another draw 
on the beer setup. 


70 


Fantasy & Science Fiction 


Rage and humiliation burned in 
David. He did not recognize the man at 
the bar as his father — and then, in a 
realization that made him shudder, he 
did. 

"Are you coming?" David could 
hardly speak for the anger. The other 
men at the bar were quiet now. Only 
the television continued to babble. 

"Go away," his father said. 

David wanted to kick over the 
stool and see the man sprawled on the 
floor. Instead he turned and walked 
stiffly back to the dining room, past 
the table where his mother and sister 
sat, and tore out to the lot, slamming 
the screen door behind him. He stood 
looking at the beat-up Nash in the red 
and white light of Fast Ed's sign. The 
sign buzzed with electricity, and night 
was coming, and clouds of insects 
swarmed around the neon in the dark- 
ness. A hundred yards away, on the 
highway, the drivers had their lights 
on, fanning before them. The air smell- 
ed of exhaust. 

He couldn't go back into the bar. 
He would never step back into a place 
like that again. The world seemed all at 
once immensely old, immensely cheap, 
immensely tawdry. David looked over 
his shoulder at the vast and empty 
woods that started just beyond the 
back of Fast Ed's. Then he walked to 
the front of the lot and stared across 
the highway toward the faraway lights 
that marked Eastbound. How very far 
away that seemed. 

David went back to the car and got 


the pack out of the trunk. He stepped 
over the rail at the edge of the lot, 
crossed the gully beside the road, and 
waiting for his chance, dashed across 
the twelve lanes of Westbound to the 
Median. A hundred yards ahead of 
him lay the beginnings of no-man's 
land. Beyond that, where those distant 
lights swept by in their retrograde mo- 
tion — what? 

But he would never get into a car 
with George Baker again. 

There were three levels of defenses 
between Westbound and Eastbound — 
or so they had surmised, and even his 
high school civics book had agreed. 
The first was biological, the second 
was mechanical, and the third and 
most important, psychological. 

As David moved farther from the 
highway, the ground, which was more 
or less level near the shoulders, grew 
broken and uneven. The field was un- 
mowed, thick with nettles and coarse 
grass, and in the increasing darkness he 
stumbled more than once. Because the 
land sloped gradually downward as he 
advanced, the lights far ahead of him 
became obscured by the foliage and 
fences. 

He thought once or twice he could 
hear his name called above the faint 
rushing of the cars behind him, but 
when he turned he could see nothing 
but Westbound. It seemed remarkably 
far away already. His progress became 
much slower. He knew there were 
snakes and worse in the open fields. 


Not Responsible! Park and Lock It! 


71 


The mines could not be far ahead. He 
could be in the minefield at that very 
moment. 

He stopped, heart racing. Suddenly 
he knew he was in a minefield, and his 
next step would blow him to pieces. He 
saw the shadow of the first line of 
barbed wire ahead of him, and for the 
first time he thought he might go back. 
But the thought of his father and his 
helpless mother stopped him. They 
would be glad to take him back, and 
smother him. 

David crouched, swung the pack 
from his shoulder and took out the 
foot-long metal detector. Sweeping it a 
few inches above the ground in front 
of him, he'^ crawled forward on his 
hands and knees. It was slow going. 
There was something funny about the 
air: he didn't smell anything but field 
and earth — no people, no rubber, no 
gasoline. He eyed the nearest watch- 
tower, where he knew searchbeams 
fanned across the Median and the au- 
tomatic rifles nosed about incuriously. 
Whenever the tiny light in his palm 
went red, David slid slowly to one side 
or the other and went on. Once he had 
to flatten himself suddenly to the earth 
as some object — animal or search 
mech — rustled through the dry grass 
not ten yards away. He waited for the 
bullet in his neck. 

He came to the first line of barbed 
wire. It was rusty and overgrown with 
weeds; so long had it been out there, 
untouched, that it had become a part 
of the ground itself. Weeds had made 


it a trellis, and when David clipped 
through the wire with his clippers, the 
overgrowth held the gap closed. He 
had to tear the op)ening wider with his 
hands, and the cheap workgloves he 
wore were next to no protection. He 
ripped himself up some. 

He lay in the dark, sweating. He 
would never last at this rate. He decid- 
ed to take the chance of moving ahead 
in short, crouching runs, ignoring 
mines. For a while it seemed to ease the 
pressure, until his foot hit and slipped 
on some metal object and he leapt 
away, shouting aloud, waiting for the 
blast that didn't come. Nothing. 
Crouched in the grass, panting, he saw 
he had stepped on a hubcap. 

David began to wonder why the 
machines hadn't spotted him yet. He 
was far beyond the point any right- 
thinking passenger or driver might 
pass. Then he realized that he could 
hear nothing of either Westbound or 
Eastbound. He had no idea how long it 
had been since he'd left the parking lot, 
but the gibbous moon was coming 
down through the clouds. David won- 
dered what Polly had done after he'd 
taken the pack and left; he could imag- 
ine George's drunken amazement as 
she told him. Maybe even Caroline 
had been quiet. He was far beyond 
them now. He was getting away, 
amazed at how easy it was, once you 
made up your mind, amazed at how 
few had had the guts to try it — if 
they'd told him the truth. 

A perverse idea came to him: may- 


72 


Fantasy & Science Fiction 


be the teachers and drivers, like sheep 
huddled in their trailer beds, had never 
tried to see what lay in the Median. 
Maybe all the servo-defenses had rot- 
ted into ineffectuality like the rusted 
barbed wire, and it was only the pres- 
sure of their dead traditions that kept 
people glued to their westward course. 
Suddenly twelve lanes, that had seem- 
ed a whole world to him all his life, 
shrank to the merest thread. Who 
could say what Eastbound might be? 
Who could predict how much better 
men had done for themselves there — 
and maybe it was the Eastbounders 
who had built the roads, who had 
created the defenses and myths that 
kept them all penned in filthy Washes, 
rolling West. 

David laughed aloud. He stood up. 
He slung the pack over his shoulder 
again, and this time boldly struck out 
for the new world. 

"Haiti" 

A figure stood erect before him, a 
blinding light shone from its head. The 
confidence drained from David instant- 
ly; he dropped to the ground. 

"Please stand." David was pinned 
in the center of the searchbeam. He 
reached into the knapsack and felt for 
the revolver. 

"This is a restricted area, intruder," 
the machine said. "Please return to 
your assigned role." 

David blinked in the glare of the 
light. He could see nothing of the 
thing's form. 

"Role?" he asked. 

Not Responsible! Park and Lock It! 


"I am sure that the first thing they 
taught you was that entry into this 
area is forbidden. Am I right?" 

"What?" David had never heard 
this kind of talk from a machine. 

"Your elders have said that you 
should not come here. That is one very 
good reason why you should not be 
here — I'm sure you'll agree. The re- 
quests of the society which, in a signifi- 
cant way, created us, if not unreason- 
able, ought to be given considerable 
thought before we reject them. This is 
the result of evolution. The men and 
women who went before you had to 
concern themselves with survival in or- 
der to live long enough to bear the chil- 
dren who eventualy became the pres- 
ent. Their rules are engineering-tested. 
Such experience, let alone your intelli- 
gence working within the framework 
of evolution, ought not to be lightly 
discarded. We are not bom into a vac- 
uum. Am I right?" 

David wasn't sure the gun was go- 
ing to do him any good: 

"I guess so. I never thought about 
it." 

"Precisely. Think about it." 

David thought. "Wait a minutel 
How do I know people made the rules? 
I don't have any proof. I never see peo- 
ple making rules now." 

"On the contrary, intruder, you see 
it every day. Every act a person per- 
forms is an act of definition. We create 
what we are from moment to moment 
in our lives — the future before us is 
merely the emptiness of time which 

73 


does not exist without events to fill it. 
The greatest of changes is possible; in 
theory you are just as likely to turn In- 
to an aimless collection of molecules in 
this next instant as you are to remain a 
human being. That is, unless you be- 
lieve that men and women are fated 
and possess no free will...." 

"People have free will." David 
knew that, if he knew anything. "And 
they ought to use it." 

"That's right." The machine's light 
was as steady as that of the sun. "You 
wouldn't be in a forbidden area if peo- 
ple did not have free will. You your- 
self, intruder, are the example of man- 
kind's freedom." 

"So let oie go by — " 

"So we have established that hu- 
man beings have free will. We will as- 
sume that they follow rules. Now, hav- 
ing free will, and assuming that by 
some mischance one of these rules is 
distasteful to them — we leave aside 
for the moment who made the rule — 
then one would expect people to dis- 
obey it. They need not have an active 
purpose to disobey; in the course of, a 
long enough period of time many peo- 
ple will break this burdensome rule for 
the best — or worst — of reasons. The 
more unacceptable the rule, the greater 
the number of people who will discard 
it at one time or another. They will, as 
individuals or groups, consciously or 
unconsciously, create a new rule. This 
is change by human volition. So, even 
if the rules were not originated by 
man, in time change would ensue given 


the merits of the system,' as we may 
call it, and the system would become 
person-created. My earlier evolution- 
ary argument then follows as the night 
the day. Am I right?"* If a robot could 
sound triumphant, this one did. 

"Ah 

"So one good reason for doing 
what you're told to do is that you have 
free will. Another good reason is 
God." 

"God?" 

"The Supreme Being, the Life 
Force, that ineluctable, undefinable 
spiritual presence that lies — or per- 
haps lurks — within the substance of 
things, the Holy Father, the First — " 

"What about him?" 

"God doesn't want you to cross the 
Median." 

"Whatl" 

"Have you ever seen an automobile 
accident?" 

The robot was going too fast, and 
the light was making it hard for David 
to think. He closed his eyes and tried to 
fight back. 

"Everybody^ seen accidents. Peo- 
ple get killed. Don't go telling me God 
killed them because they did something 
wrong — " 

"Don't be absurdi" The robot said 
scornfully. "You must try to stretch 
your mind; this is not some game we're 
playing, intruder. This is real life. Not 
only do actions have consequences, 
but consequences are pregnant with 
Meaning. 

"In the auto accident, we have a pe- 


74 


Fantasy & Science Fiction 


culiar sequence of events. The physicist 
tells us that heat and vibration cause a 
weakening of the molecular bonds be- 
tween certain long-chain hydrocarbons 
which comprise the substance of the 
left front tire of a car traveling at ICX) 
miles per hour. The tire blows. As a re- 
sult of the sudden increase in friction 
and change in the moment of inertia of 
this wheel, certain complex, analyzable 
oscillations occur. The car swerves to 
the left, rolls over six times, tossing its 
three passengers, a man and two wo- 
men, about like tomatoes in a blender, 
and collides with a bridge abutment, 
bursting into flame. To the scientist, 
this is a simple cause-and-effect chain. 
The accident has a rational explana- 
tion: the tire blew.'' 

David felt slightly queasy. He had 
forgotten about the gun. 

"You see right away what's wrong 
with this 'explanation.' It explains 
nothing. We know the rational explan- 
ation is inadequate without having to 
be able to say how we know. Such 
knowledge is the doing of God. God 
and His merciful Providence provide 
the purpose behind the fact of our ex- 
istence, and is it possible to believe that 
a sparrow can fall without His holy 
Cognizance and Will?" 

"I don't believe in God." 

"What does that matter, intruder?" 
The thing's voice now oozed mild and 
angellic understanding. "Need you be- 
lieve in gravity for it to be an inescap- 
able fact of your existence? God does 
not demand your belief; He requests 


that you, of your own inviolate free 
will and through the undeserved gift of 
His Grace, come to acknowledge and 
obey Him. Who can understand the 
mysteries of faith? Certainly not I, a 
humble mechanism. Knowledge is 
what matters, and if you open yourself 
to the currents that flow through the 
interstices of the material and immater- 
ial universe, that knowledge will be 
vouchsafed you, intruder. You do not 
belong here. God knows who you are, 
and He saw what you did. Am I right?" 

David felt confused and sick. But 
he was getting mad, and he wanted to 
get away. 

"What has this got to do with car 
accidents?" he demanded. 

'The automobile accident does not 
occur without the knowledge and per- 
mission of the Lord. This doesn't mean 
that He is responsible for it. He accepts 
the responsibility without accepting 
the Responsibility. This is a mystery." 

"Bullshit." 

"Where were you when He laid the 
asphalt of Westbound? Tell me that. 
Who set up the mileage markers, and 
who painted the line upon it? On what 
foundation was its reinforced concrete 
sunk, and who made the komfy kab- 
ins, when the morning stars sang to- 
gether, and all the droids and servos 
shouted for joy?" 

It was his chance. The machine was 
still motionless, its mad light trained 
on him. A mist had sprung from the 
no-man's land — poison gas? He had 
no gas mask; speed was his only hope. 


Not Responsible! Park and Lock It! 


75 


He couldn't move. He hefted the gun in 
his hand. He felt dizzy and a little 
numb, steeling himself to move. He 
had to be stronger than the robot! It 
was just a machine! 

"So that is the second good reason 
why you should not proceed with your 
ill-advised adventure/' it droned on. 
"God is telling you to do back." 

Eyes of God. Eyes of the rifles. He 
had to go! Now! Still he couldn't 
move. The fog grew, and its smell was 
strangely pungent. Once past the 
robot, who knew what ... he ... could 
find. But the machine's voice exuded 
metallic self-confidence. 

"A third and final good reason why 
you should return to your assigned 
role, intruder, is this: 

"If you take another step, I will kill 
you." 

t£]avid woke. He was cold, and he 
was being held tightly and shaken by a 
sobbing man. It was his father. 

"Not responsible! Park and lock 
it!" For the first time in as long as he 
could remember, David actually heard 
the crying of the lightposts in the park- 
ing lot. He struggled to sit up. His 
mouth tasted like a thousand miles of 
road grime. 

George Baker held his shoulders 
and looked into his face. He didn't say 
anything. He stood up and went to 
stand by the car. Shakily, he lit a cigar- 
ette. David's mother crouched over 
him. "David, David ... are you all 
right?" 


"What happened?" 

"Your father went after you. We 
didn't know what happened and I was 
so afraid I'd lose both of you — and 
then he came back carrying you in his 
arms." 

"Carrying me! That's ridiculous!" 
George wasn't capable of carrying a 
wheel hub fifty yards. David looked at 
the pot-bellied man leaning against the 
front fender of their car. His father was 
staring off across the sparsely populat- 
ed lot. Suddenly David was very 
ashamed of himself. He didn't know 
what it was in his chest striving to ex- 
press itself, but sitting there in the 
parking lot at mile 1.375 x 10“, looking 
at the middle-aged man who was his 
father, he began to cry. 

George never said a word to David 
after that day about how he had man- 
aged to follow his son into the 
no-man's land of the Median, about 
what a struggle it must have been to 
make himself do that, about how and 
where he had found the boy, and how 
he had managed to bring him back, or 
about what it had all meant to him. 
David never told his father about the 
robot and what it had said. It all seem- 
ed a little unreal to him. The boy who 
had stood there, desperately trying to 
get somewhere else, and the words the 
robot had spoken all seemed terribly 
remote, as if the whole incident were 
something he had read about. It was a 
fantasy that could not have occurred in 
the real world of pavement and gaso- 
line. 


76 


Fantasy & Science Fiction 


The father and the son did not 
speak about it. They didn't say much 
of anything at first, as they tentatively 
felt out the boundaries of what seemed 
to be a new relationship. Even 
Caroline seemed to recognize that a 
change had taken place, and she didn't 
taunt David the way she had before. 
Unstated, but there was the fact that 
David was no longer a boy. 

A month later and many thousand 
miles farther along, George Baker, 
with nervous casualness, broached the 
subject of buying David a car. It was a 
shock for David to hear that, and he 
knew they could hardly afford it, but 
he also knew there was a rightness to 
it. And so they found themselves in the 
lot of Gears MacDougal's New and Us- 
ed Autos. 

George was being too loud, too joc- 
ular. "How about this Chevy, David? 
A Chevy's a good driving man's car." 
He suddenly looked embarrassed. 

David got down and felt a tire. 
"She's got good rubber on her." 

The salesdroid was rolling up to 
greet them as George opened the hood 
of the Chevy. "Looks pretty clean," he 
said. 

"They clean them all up." 

"They sure do. You can't trust 
them as far as you'd ... ah, hello." 

"Good morning," the droid said, 
coming to rest beside them. "That's 
just the little thing for you. One own- 
er, and between you and me, he didn't 
drive her too hard. He wasn't much of 
a driver." 


George looked at the machine so- 
berly. "Is that so." 

"That is so, sir." 

"My sons's buying this car, not 
me." George said suddenly, in a louder 
voice, as if shaking away the dust of 
his thoughts. "You should talk to him. 
And don't try to put anything over on 
him; he knows his stuff and ... well, 
you just talk to him, not me, see?" 

"Certainly, sir." The droid rolled 
between them and told David about 
the Chevy's V-8. David hardly listen- 
ed. He watched his father step quietly 
to the side and light another of his cig- 
arettes. George stood with Polly and 
Caroline and looked ill at ease and 
quieter than David could ever remem- 
ber seeing him. The robot took David 
around the car, pointing out its extras, 
and it came to David just what his 
father was: not a strong man, not a 
particularly special man, not a particu- 
larly intelligent man. He was the same 
man he had been when David had sat 
on his lap years before, he was the 
same man who had taken him on his 
strolls around the rest stops so many 
times, he was the drunk who had 
slouched on the stool in Fast Ed's. He 
was a good driving man. 

"I'll take it," David said, breaking 
off the sales droid in midsentence. 

"Righto," the machine said, its hard 
smile unvarying. It did not miss a beat. 
Within seconds a hard copy of the title 
had emerged from the slot in its chest. 
Within minutes the papers had been 
signed, the mileage validated and sub- 


Not Responsible! Park and Lock It! 


77 


tracted from George Baker's yearly to- 
tal, and David stood beside his car. It 
was not a very good car to start out 
with, but many had started with less, 
and it was the best his father could do. 
Polly hugged him and cried. Caroline 
reached up and kissed him on the 
cheek; she cried too. George shook his 
hand and did not seem to want to let 

go- 

"Remember now, take it easy for 
the first thousand or so, till you get the 
feel of her. Check the oil, see if it bums 
oil. I don't think it will. It's got a good 
spare, doesn't it?" 

"It does. Dad." 

"Good. That's good." He stood si- 
lent for a moment, looking up at his 
son. The sun was bright, and the light 
breeze disarrayed the thinning hair he 
had combed over his bald spot. 
"Goodbye, David. Maybe we'll see 
you on the road?" 

"Sure you will." 

David got into the Chevy and turn- 
ed the key in the ignition. The motor 


started immediately and breathed its 
low and steady rumble. The seat was 
very hot against David's back. The 
windshield was spotless, and beyond 
the nose of the car stretched the access 
ramp to Westbound, swarming now 
with the cars that were moving while 
they dawdled there still. David put the 
car in gear, stepped slowly on the ac- 
celerator, let out the clutch, and mov- 
ed smoothly down the ramp, gathering 
speed. He shifted up then, moving fast- 
er now, and then quickly once again. 
The force of the wind streaming in 
through the driver's side window in- 
creased from a breeze to a gale, and its 
sound became a continuous buffeting 
as it whipped his hair about his ear. 
Flicking the turn signal, David merged 
into the flow of traffic, the sunlight 
flashing off the hood ornament that 
lead him on toward the distant hori- 
zon, just out of his reach, but attain- 
able he knew, as he pressed his foot to 
the accelerator, hurrying on past mile 
1.375 X 10 “ 



78 


Fantasy & Science Fiction 


Michael Ward's first F&SF story concerns an experiment to 
project volunteers to a fantasy landscape that turns out to be 
real enough so that some men do not return. Mr. Ward lives in 
Baton Rouge and reports that he recently got married and took 
on a new job in advertising. 


One Way Ticket 
To Elsewhere 


L 


BY 

MICHAEL WARD 


I angley leaned over his desk to- 
ward me. The plastic badge clipped to 
his lapel momentarily caught the light 
and flashed it in my eyes. I was wear- 
ing a similar badge, only where his had 
his picture, mine had the word tempo- 
rary. He said, 'The first thing I'm go- 
ing to tell you is these are not fanta- 
sies." He paused to await a reaction. I 
let him sit there two or three seconds, 
until he started to radiate the chill of 
death, then raised my eyebrows at 
him. This wasn't quite enough to suit, 
but he had his speech ready, so he 
went on anyway. "I mean it. The pro- 
ject may be officially designated Com- 
puter Interface Projected Fantasy 
Landscape Research, but that land- 
scape's real. In the project, here, we 
call it Elsewhere. Going Elsewhere. 
And if you've gone Elsewhere and you 
walk up to some twelve-foot-tall 
demon with big sharp teeth, and that 


demon smiles and bends over you and 
bites your head off, you don't come 
back." 

"I understand that," I told him. "I 
want to see Kraus, now." 

"I haven't finished with you yet, 
mister." 

I stood up. "You can tell me the rest 
on the way." 

We walked down carpeted corri- 
dors lined with closed, uninfcrmative- 
ly numbered doors of blond wood, de- 
scended on two different elevators, 
then walked some more. Langley 
didn't really have anything else to say. 
He just wanted to make sure, without 
actually putting it into words, that I 
understood the pecking order: I was a 
newcomer and I was at the bottom. 
Langley, I knew, was a former astro- 
naut — one unspectacular flight before 
they closed down the program — and. 


One Wjjy Ticket To Elsewhere 


79 


to judge by the debris of prep school 
left in his accent, had gotten there by 
way of Annapolis and Navy flight test. 
He wasn't about to let all that man- 
hood go to waste. 

We came to a guard at a desk who 
looked up from Newsweek just long 
enough to initial where Langley signed 
us both in. We passed, went down a 
hall. 

I had followed the space program, 
while we still had one, and I 
remembered a publicity photo of Lang- 
ley standing, suited and grinning, out- 
side the shuttle trainer. He had just 
performed some kind of maneuver pre- 
viously thought impossible. He'd had a 
reputation as a tom-catter and a rule- 
bender. I said, "I've got an idea you 
wouldn't have taken this security rig- 
marole so seriously while you were still 
with NASA." 

He was walking ahead of me. He 
stopped. I stopped too, still behind 
him. 1 saw his shoulders rise with ten- 
sion. He said very quietly to the empty 
hall ahead of him, "Fuck NASA." And 
then he walked on. 

We passed somebody in a white lab 
coat, hands in her pockets. Somebody 
else carrying a clipboard. 

Langley held a door open for me. 
He managed to make it a contemp- 
tuous gesture. 

Inside the room another Lab Coat 
sat at a console consisting of three 
CRTs and two keyboards. She was 
leaning back in her swivel chair, idly 
and unnecessarily tapping a cigarette 


on the rim of a crowded ashtray be- 
tween the two keyboards. 

"Any changes?" Langley asked her. 

"No, sir." 

One CRT held a vital-signs display 
— quiet, somebody very relaxed or 
maybe asleep. The other two displayed 
grids of numbers. 

"Don't you know there's no smok- 
ing in here?" 

"Yes, sir." 

The back of the room was curtain- 
ed off. I walked over to it, said, "In 
here?" 

"Yes," Langley said. "Then put out 
that cigarette." 

"Yes, sir." 

I pulled the curtain open. Kraus lay 
there on a couch. He looked asleep. A 
tube from an I.V. bottle led to the in- 
side of one elbow. 

I heard Langley come up behind 
me. "Well, mister, see what you want- 
ed?" 

I looked at Kraus lying there so 
peacefully. Someone had just shaved 
him — the gear was on a rolling stand 
next to the couch. I looked at his close- 
cropped head — his cleanly shaved 
face was almost lineless — resting on a 
small piUow like a baby's pillow. "I 
guess I just wanted to see what I was 
getting into." 

Langley pointed to one of the 
CRTs. "Okay, what we have here — " 

"Is a vital-signs display." 

He gave me the Look. "Right. Nor- 
mally, when somebody loses it," he in- 


80 


Fantasy St Science Fiction 


dicated one of the scan lines, "'we get a 
null cerebral function. Classic brain- 
death." Quaint way to put it. Loses it. 
His hand moved to the next CRT, 
drew a circle encompassing the grid of 
numbers. "All these become zero, or 
nearly so. You see, each position in the 
matrix, here, refers to some element in 
the landscape. Elsewhere." 

"Does any of this have a use? Aside 
from telling whether or not some- 
body's dead." 

"It's data," he said with a touch of 
defensiveness, "for analysis and colla- 
tion. All this will be integrated with the 
subject's debriefing, afterwards." 

"I mean the project itself. What's 
the rationale behind it's existence?" 

"Pure research doesn't need a justi- 
fication." 

"Of course," I said. "But surely you 
don't put that on your grant 
proposals." He certainly was touchy. 

"No." As Langley spoke he gave me 
a withering look, as only an officer and 
a gentleman can, that told me without 
ambiguity to mind my p's and q's, 
mister. "We expect to make some rath- 
er spectacular strides within the men- 
tal-health field, for example." 

I had little interest in poking holes 
in his source of bread and butter and 
self-esteem. So I gave him a convinc- 
ing, thoughtful nod and let it go. 

"At any rate, during a normal ses- 
sion, all these are in constant flux as 
the subject perceives and or interacts 
with them. As you can see, these are 
fairly stable." 


"Unusual." 

"Right. And this..." He pointed to 
a number that, among all the others, 
looked quite undistinguished, except... 

"Zero," I said. 

"Right . " Oh, he was having a great 
time, now. I was giving the right re- 
sponses at the right times. The Lab 
Coat looked as if she were five dollars 
short of being able to hire a demon to 
bite Langley's head off. As he went on 
to say, "And what this represents, spe- 
cifically—" I shook out cigarettes for 
her and myself, lit them, "—in that 
landscape, is the ego." 

I looked at him. "Ego?" 

"The choice-making self. The 
His tone would have been more appro- 
priate to a quiet "Fuck you." 

"But if the self is gone," I said, "the 
landscape ... would collapse. Right? So 
where is it?" 

"You tell me," he said. 

Langley showed me to my room. 
He had certainly taken a quick dislike 
to me — and I would have to admit, 
first, that I had done little to discour- 
age it and, second, that the reaction 
was reciprocal. This didn't bother me 
much. I had assessed him from the 
start as the kind of man who didn't like 
people; he respected them — and was 
incapable of respecting anyone but a 
superior or a subordinate. 

The room was like a Holiday Inn 
with anemia. I unpacked my change of 
clothes and' my toilet kit and my 
Travalarm and the rest. 


One Way Ticket To Elsewhere 


81 


On the way up, Langley had point- 
ed out the cafeteria. Tomorrow, I 
would go out and get a decent meal. 
Tonight, I wanted to check out the 
program participants. Serving time 
was between five and six-thirty, and I 
had a vague recollection that the food 
in such places was better earlier. It was 
now a few minutes after five, so — in 
this uncivilized hour — I took me 
down. 

They told me the stuff on my plate 
was food. I took them at their word ... 
but let it go. 

The participants did not sit with the 
Lab Coats — there was a demilitarized 
zone of an aisleway between them. I 
sat at a vacant spot at the participants' 
table. They looked at me with silent 
suspicion for so long that I said, "Is this 
seat being saved for somebody or 
what?" 

The one sitting across from me, a 
heavy-set guy, about thirty, blond 
hair, very thin on top, said, "You must 
be the guy they brought in about 
Kraus." 

"That's right. What's your name?" 

"Anderson." 

So I told him mine, and we shook 
hands, but as a gesture 1 didn't think it 
meant much to him. I said, "I can't 
help noticing the segregated seating," 
and nodded at the Lab Coats. 

"Shit," Anderson said. "They don't 
know what's goin' on. They don't un- 
derstand." 

The man sitting on my left gave a 
brief, high-pitched laugh, then leaned 


forward, knife in one hand, fork in the 
other, and said to me, "Listen, have 
you ever done it? Gone into computer 
interface projected fantasy landscape?" 

"Gone Elsewhere? No." 

Anderson looked displeased with 
me. I think he disliked an outsider ap- 
propriating their language. It didn't 
seem to bother the other guy, who 
said, "Well, neither have they. And 
you don't understand, either." 

"Explain it to me. Maybe then I 
will. And who are you?" 

"Jeff. And, no, I won't explain. 
There are certain things, certain as- 
pects of it that you just don't talk 
about. Because when you name one of 
them, it's like spreading a tarp over a 
patch of grass: it dies. But you will un- 
derstand, if you go. Anderson under- 
stands." 

"I been ten times," Anderson said. 
He poked a thumb at a man, about for- 
ty, sitting next to him. "So's he. She — " 
he poked the thumb at somebody else, 
" — seventeen. Jeff here's lost count." 

"No kidding?" I said, deadpan, to 
Jeff. Then, "Okay, so what about 
Kraus? What do you think happened 
to him?" 

Everybody went back to looking 
serious and sullen — and scared, I real- 
ized. 

Anderson said, so low it was al- 
most under his breath, "Some people 
just can't liandle themselves." 

That sounded a little uninforma- 
tive. 

"That sounds a little uninforma- 


82 


Fantasy & Science Fiction 


tive/' I said. Also, I suspected, it actu- 
ally meant that can't happen to me. 

'Tough,'' he said. 

The guy next to him, the one who'd 
also gone ten times, said, "Who are 
you anyhow? Why'd you get called 
in?" 

That sounded a little like an at- 
tempt to change the subject. 

"Tough," Anderson said, leaning 
across the table and poking me in the 
chest with a forefinger that felt like the 
end of a broom handle. 

I curled my lip at him and said, "An 
expanded vocabulary is an expanded 
horizon." 

"Don't you know?" Jeff said. "Our 
friend here has quite a reputation in 
certain circles. Seems he has a talent 
for finding things. He's the one who 
found that tactical weapon that was 
lost in the Mediterranean a couple 
years ago." 

"I remember that," said the guy 
next to Anderson. "It was in the 
papers. So, what — do you do salvage 
work?" 

"He just finds things," said Jeff. 
"Senators. Strange little canisters miss- 
ing from laboratories...." 

"I'll tell you what," I told Jeff, "I 
don't throw any tarps over your pat- 
ches of grass; you don't throw any 
over my vegetable gardens. How does 
that sound?" 

He barked his high-pitched laugh 
again — like a startled Chihuahua — 
and said, "You do like your privacy, 
hey, friend? That's okay. I think we 


can all understand that." 

"Shit," Anderson said. 

I went back to my room, having come 
to the conclusion that the conversation 
in the cafeteria was hardly more satis- 
fying than the food. 

I unwrapped a glass from the bath- 
room, took it over to the dresser where 
I'd set my traveling bottle of Hennes- 
sey's and poured myself a couple of 
fingers. Stretched out on the bed with 
my glass and a cigarette, got up almost 
immediately and went to the phone. 

It took only a moderate amount of 
belligerence to get what I wanted, and 
before my cigarette was gone, a mes- 
senger came knocking at my door. I 
signed for the packet, then went back 
to the bed and did my best to settle in. 

The packet held Kraus's dossier. It 
looked a little thin. 

Thirty-one years old. Blond hair. 
Gray eyes. Scar on left knee as a result 
of ten-year-old motorcycle accident. 
No history of alcoholism or other drug 
abuse. 

I was interrupted by a knock at the 
door. It was Jeff. 

He had a present for me: a small 
cellophane envelope containing a blue 
gelatin cap. He told me to take it at 
least six hours before I was scheduled 
to go into interface. The molar circuits 
needed that long to migrate to their 
proper receptor sites. It was good for 
about three days. On the fourth, the 
transmissions started getting noisy. 


One Way Ticket To Elsewhere 


83 


and the signals turned to garbage and 
then quit altogether. 

Smiling like the Cheshire Cat, he 
backed out the door and closed it. 


While a Lab Coat checked the tele- 
metry, Langley asked me if I was com- 
fortable and didn't wait for an answer. 
I was. After the physical, they had 
hypnotized me, and now I was so re- 
laxed I could have fallen asleep falling 
off a cliff, if I'd wanted to. 

"I have to go to the bathroom," 
said Jeff. 

Langley didn't think that amusing. 
Well, neither did I, much, but let it go. 
We wouldn't be gone that long. 

Earlier this morning I had learned 
through a chance conversation that 
having an experienced partner along 
the first time or two was a big help. I'd 
button-holed Langley, insisted on Jeff, 
asked why he was going to let me go 
alone. Seems he thought there was no 
point. 

"Very well," said Langley. "We are 
ready to commence countdown." I'll 
bet he got a charge out of saying that. 
It was probably his idea. 

"Close your eyes during count- 
down," Jeff said. "It makes the transi- 
tion easier." 

"Are you ready?" Langley said, for 
the ritual not the response. 

"Ready," we said, not quite in uni- 
son. 

I closed my eyes. 

"Five ... four ... three ... two ... 
one ... Mark." j 


I experienced a brief wave of verti- 
go. 

Then I felt normal, except, I realiz- 
ed, that I was now sitting. I opened my 
eyes and stood. 

I was inside an elevator. Jeff stood 
next to me. "Is this part of it?" I asked 
him and gestured around me. 

"Somewhere in between. Hypnotic 
implant. Helps ease us in. All set?" 

I nodded. 

There were only two buttons be- 
side the door. He pressed the one with 
the arrow pointing down. 

I had no sensation of movement. 
After a couple of seconds, the door 
rolled open. I don't know what I had 
expected. 

What I saw out there was a human 
junkyard. 

"Come on," Jeff said, and I follow- 
ed him into it. 

Heads, hands, feet, chests, arms, 
genitalia, things I couldn't identify, 
and pieces of pieces, all scattered and 
piled and scattered from toppled piles. 

The ground was gray. All those 
body parts were a slightly darker gray. 
Underfoot, the ground felt like hard- 
packed sand. The sky was a writhing, 
roiling mass of thick, dark (gray) 
clouds, so low that — combined with 
the short line of sight through the hu- 
man junkpiles — I had a feeling of be- 
ing indoors. 

I knelt for a closer look at a hand 
that lay in the middle of an otherwise 
clear spot. It had been broken off, 
diagonally, across the palm. I reached 


84 


Fantasy & Science Fiction 


out to pick it up, paused, looked at 
Jeff. 

"Go ahead." 

It felt like sandstone. The face of 
the break was featureless. I dropped it 
and stood. 

"Come on," Jeff said. 

There was a fairly clear path 
through this dismemberment's jungle. 
As we followed it, I noticed that ipy 
clothes had not changed in my transi- 
tion to Elsewhere. I commented on this 
and asked Jeff if it might be possible to 
bring other things through. I was 
thinking of weapons. 

"No," he said. "I've tried and they 
don't go. I think the only reason our 
clothes do is that they are so much a 
part of our self-image." 

After another moment of silent 
walking, I was noticing a face — just 
that, like a mask — resting on the 
ground, looking like it belonged to 
someone sinking and it was the last part 
to go under, its expression one of sur- 
render and sublime contentment, when 
Jeff remarked that I would probably be 
treated a little more warmly by the 
participants after my baptism, here. 

"I was wondering when the wel- 
come wagon would call," I told him. "I 
still haven't received my compliment- 
ary doormat." 

"We don't need doormats around 
here. We just use Langley." 

I smiled. "And Langley uses the Lab 
Coats." 

"That's right. And the Lab Coats 
use us. It's a neat arrangement." 


We walked for another minute, oc- 
casionally stepping over debris that 
had rolled onto the path, and then 
came to something new. Jeff stopped 
me from walking up to it. 

We faced a wall — for lack of a bet- 
ter word; it was a vertical plane in our 
way — that had colors filming its sur- 
face like the rainbows on an oil slick. 
Jeff said, "Okay, what we're going to 
do is run and jump into it." 

"You're kidding," I said. It looked 
solid. 

"No, I'm not." He grinned. "Here, 
look." He picked up the front third of a 
foot and underhanded it at the wall. 
No clunk; it just disappeared into it. 
"Okay? ... Okay, go." 

He dashed, and I dashed after and 
kept pace with him. He jumped, and I 
followed. 

And hit the wall, flying. 

And disappeared. 

That^ how it felt. All the little 
aches and pains and miscellaneous sen- 
sations that added up to an awareness 
of myself were gone, just like that — 
the feel of my hair shaking as I moved, 
of the perpetual stiffness in my left 
elbow, of my shorts binding me slight- 
ly in the crotch, even of breathing — 
and what was left was a point, in the 
Euclidean sense, infinitely small in all 
dimensions, of awareness moving 
through some kind of space. I wasn't 
afraid; my ^motions seemed to be 
gone, too. Then it turned out that all 
my sensations weren't gone; they were 
just different. They became something 


One Way Ticket To Elsewhere 


85 


I passed through rather then had or 
was. I passed through blue for a while, 
then passed through the smell of limes, 
then sadness, more blue, magenta, 
then a sensation like immersion in 
warm soda water. . . 

...And when I passed out of that, I 
was landing on one foot on the 
ground, stumbling, falling to one knee, 
realizing I was back to myself.... 

I looked up at Jeff, facing me. He 
bent forward, hit his thighs with both 
fists, laughing his chihuahua laugh, 
and shouted, ''Isn't that great?" 

Instead of getting up, I let myself 
fall onto my back, saying "Yeah," and 
laughed and immediately banged the 
back of my head on some jagged ana- 
tomical fragment. It hurt like hell. 
"Oh, shit." And laughed some more, 
touched the sore spot, looked at my 
fingertips: red. 

"Oh, shit," Jeff said, and he wasn't 
laughing. 

'It's not that—" I began, then fully 
heard his tone and really looked at 
him. 

Mouth open, he was staring at my 
fingers. 

Suddenly, then, he grabbed my 
arm. "Upl Come on. Get up, danmiti" 

"What's the matter?" 

"Come on." With his free hand he 
was searching his pockets. "Handker- 
chiefl" 

"What?" I was up, and he was pull- 
ing me along. We were running, and he 
was yelling about a damn handker- 
chief. 


"Handkerchief, handkerchief I ... 
Oh, crap." He gave up on his pockets, 
grabbed his sleeve up near the 
shoulder, yanked, yanked again and 
tore it all the way off his arm. 

And now I was hearing rustling 
noises all around us. Mostly from be- 
hind. 

"Here." He pushed the sleeve at 
me. "Wipe the blood off on this." 

"It's not that bad—" 

"Do itl" 

So I did. It slowed me down a bit, 
and I pushed to catch up with him. 
"Okay. " 

"Give it here. " 

I passed it to him like a baton in a 
relay. 

He wadded it up and abruptly stop- 
ped — I passed him — turned and 
threw it, hard. Then he was running 
again, and I stopped. 

He passed me as I stood watching 
the things that went for that bloody 
sleeve. 

The ground, the same ground over 
which we had run, had puckered into 
many long, thin, wrinkled tubes that 
waved and probed. Some had come up 
under piles of body parts, sending 
them shifting and tumbling. The rag 
was lost in a rustling, writhing cluster 
of them. More were growing closer to 
me. 

And another just a few feet away. 

"Hey!" came Jeff's voice. 

I ran. 

I caught up with him, and together 
we ran on through more of the ana- 


86 


Fantasy & Science Fiction 


tomical junkyard. More rustlings, like 
the sounds made by a restless sleeper in 
sweat-dampened sheets, came from 
behind us, and sometimes the sound of 
a small avalanche. My heart was rac- 
ing faster than my feet. I saw that a 
short distance ahead this terrain ended. 
There was a white railing marking the 
border, then nothing: the rail guarded 
the edge of a cliff. We followed the 
rail, while I caught glimpses down, 
way down. There was a river, there, 
partially masked by mist. It ran 
through a channel smooth and straight 
enough to be concrete. I could faintly 
hear rapids. In a moment we came to a 
gap in the railing, and through it was 
the constantly reappearing top step of 
an escalator. 

We made the kind of time a person 
can make, running down a down-esca- 
lator. 

After a moment we stopped run- 
ning, let the escalator carry us, and 
began to catch up on our breathing. 
Jeff told me, between breaths, "Fm go- 
ing to have to travel with you more of- 
ten." 

"Not getting enough excitement all 
by yourself?" 

He shook his head. "When I come 
here by myself," he thumped the esca- 
lator rail with the heel of his hand, "1 
find a spiral staircase." 

"Oh." I looked back at the head of 
the escalator, fifty feet away. Those 
wrinkled tubes were poking and wav- 
ing over the edge. "What would those 
things have done?" 


"Killed you. Other than that, I 
couldn't say." He rubbed the back of 
his neck. "I lost a partner to them once. 
He stepped on something round. Roll- 
ed out from under his foot and he fell 
into a pile of those ... body parts." Jeff 
wasn't looking at me. He was pickmg 
at a flaw in the weave of his pants. 
"Collapsed on top of him. He wasn't 
hurt seriously, but he was cut in sever- 
al places. At that time we didn't know 
about those tubes, and he just sat 
there, dusting himself off and com- 
plaining about his bruises." He left off 
with the flaw in his pants and began 
picking at a shred of skin, perhaps 
from an old blister, on the palm of one 
hand. "I was looking at something else, 
I don't re — yeah, I do; it was an eye- 
ball — when the ground pooched up in 
about four or five places. I heard him 
grunt, and I looked around. The tubes 
had gone straight for the blood, attach- 
ed themselves to the wounds. He was 
trying to get free, and I jumped over to 
help him. We couldn't pull them off. 
Tried breaking them. Couldn't. He was 
really scared, and so was I." Jeff turned 
his hands over, looking at them. "A lot 
more of the tubes had come up, some 
hovering, some dipping down to at- 
tach themselves. Then I looked up and 
saw one of them moving toward me . . . 
I jumped back. And then I saw him 
open his mouth — to scream, I guess 
— and a whole bunch of them went 
down his throat. Another one wedged 
in amongst the bunch. And another. 
And another .. I heard his jaw pop as 


One Way Ticket To Elsewhere 


87 


his mouth was forced open farther 
than it was supposed to go. That's 
when I really panicked, and I bolted 
for the elevator ... Just a few seconds 
after I made it to the projection room, I 
saw his death register on the CRT...." 
He let his hands drop, shook his head. 
"I should have warned you. It's just 
that everybody knows about them, 
and it's been a long time since there's 
been any trouble with them, and they 
are not a memory I like to dwell on. . . ." 

"Forget it," I said. "You thought 
fast and saved my skin." 

He nodded, looked at his hands 
again, "You know I can still remember 
how they felt, like chamois," and rub- 
bed his hands on his pants legs. 

I felt a shudder that didn't quite 
make it to the surface. 

We were getting close to the bottom 
of the escalator, now. I looked at the 
river in its smooth, straight channel. 
All that I could see was rapids. The 
roaring grew louder as we got closer. 

The channel did look like concrete 
... felt like it. 

The water's sound was huge. 

Jeff cupped his hands around my 
ear and shouted into them; "Feel it? 
Don't get too close to the water/' 

I did feel it. Partly, it was mixed in 
with the rhythms of the white water 
sound. Partly, the feeling just was. The 
more I paid attention, the more vivid it 
became. And whatever it was, it was 
seductive. It was infectious. It was sin- 
ister. 

It would have been such a heavenly 


malignant thing to walk into that 
water. 

"Get closer, carefully," Jeff told 

me. 

I looked at him, and he nodded. 

So I edged up to the shoreline. The 
water lapped higher and harder at the 
point closest to me. When I got within 
a few feet, a wave broke and sent up a 
spout of water which, as I watched, 
stretched and changed into an arm of 
water with a hand at the end of it, and 
it bent and fell, caressing my pants leg 
as it came down, and then flowed back 
along the ground into the river. And at 
that moment the roaring water sound 
seemed to contain a thousand huge 
sighs. And another wave broke and 
sent out another reaching arm.... 

And I backed away from it. 

I turned to Jeff, and he said, "Look 
at your pants leg, where it tried to feel 
you up." 

Swatches of cloth were gone, as if 
dissolved away. 

Jeff led me downstream. I had to 
purposefully choose to walk straight, 
not curve toward the water. 

Shortly, we came to a spot where 
the river went underground. It just 
roared into a cave and was gone. The 
sound quickly diminished as we kept 
walking. We were soon able to con- 
verse with normal effort, and Jeff told 
me, "I lost a foot to that thing once." 
He smiled — I guess at my expression. 
"It grew back." 

We continued on. The water's at- 
traction had faded. The cliff face curv- 


es 


Fantasy & Science Fiction 


ed away from us. More and more 
sharply. Then, when it was a couple 
hundred yards distant, it abruptly par- 
alleled us again, ran for a few hundred 
feet, and ended. 

Jeff signaled a stop, brought an in- 
dex finger to his lips, then pointed with 
the same finger at the distant cliff face. 
The terrain between us and the cliff 
was flat and smooth with a soft look- 
ing texture, mottled with tans and 
beiges. Jeff took a deep breath and 
gave a piercing whistle. 

Waves of vivid color raced away 
from him, across the plain, and splash- 
ed against the cliff in geometric pat- 
terns ... which then faded. 

He shouted. 'To whom it may con- 
ceml" 

And the waves of red, blue, 
yellow, green raced out, splashed the 
cliff and formed ... words. 

To whom it may concern. 

I looked at Jeff: grinning. Looked at 
the cliff: fading. I tried it myself. 

In the beginning ... a hundred feet 
high. 

The words faded, and I was about 
to do an encore, when Jeff stopped me 
with a hand on my shoulder. He 
stomped on the ground with one foot. 

Fragments of color flashed about 
the plain. Tremors of color on the cliff, 
then my words appeared there again. I 
tried this. In the beginning appeared 
there yet again, just a little decayed 
around the edges this time. 

We played here for a while, flinging 
words full of color at the cliff face, 


then Jeff suggested this was enough for 
one session and that we be getting 
back. 1 reluctantly agreed. As we went, 
I asked him a couple things, starting 
with: "Just how much is there in this 
place. Elsewhere?" 

"You've seen ... maybe ten percent 
of what we've explored so far. And I 
have no way of knowing, but I suspect 
that what we've explored is only a tiny 
fraction of all there is. It gets more and 
more idiosyncratic the farther away 
from the elevator you get. Maybe there 
is no limit." 

"What about Langley? Does he 
come here?" 

"As far as I know, he only did 
once. It was in the early part of the 
program, and we didn't know some of 
the things we do now. He insisted on 
coming by himself, I think because he 
had the idea that his innermost soul 
would be laid bare to whoever might 
have gone with him. So anyway, he 
took a wrong turn somewhere and 
ended up in some kind of Hieronymus 
Bosch nightmare-land, and I guess that 
killed his interest." 

By now we were on the escalator, 
riding up, river safely behind us. It oc- 
curred to me that this same escalator 
had been going down, before. Well, I'd 
seen stranger things. 

Jeff asked, "How's the head? Stop- 
ped bleeding?" 

And I suddenly remembered what 
we'd left up there, uneasily checked 
my cut. "It's stopped." 

"Good." 


One Way Ticket To Elsewhere 


’ 89 


Topside, there was no sign of the 
tube things. 

Or of the rag. 

We followed the path, through the 
wall, back to the elevator, the door 
was open. Jeff pressed the UP button. 
The door closed, and a minute later, 
opened again. We stepped out. 

I realized, then, that I was standing 
in the middle of the projection-room 
floor. Jeff stood next to me. There was 
no elevator behind us. 

I was walking back to my room. After 
a lunch that a roach would have passed 
over, and after wasting a long after- 
noon wandering the building, poking 
my nose wherever that plastic badge 
permitted, I had decided I would sip 
my supper. I had seen a lot of things 
this day. At one point nearly got kill- 
ed. 

I was tired. 

Footsteps on Acrolan. Fuzzy shad- 
ows cast by fluorescents. Numbered 
doors. It occurred to me that I hadn't 
seen a window in the whole damn 
building. I wanted a little time to sit — • 
in my small, windowless room — and 
think. Assimilate. 

Anderson came around the comer 
ahead, walked toward me. 

I didn't want to talk to him, just 
then. So I nodded to him, lowered my 
head and hunched my shoulders into 
as uncommunicative a posture as I 
could. 

The next thing I knew, I had been 


slammed up against the wall and pin- 
ned there. 

Anderson's face, about six inches 
from mine, was red. Cords stood out 
in his thick neck. He had me by the 
front of my shirt with one hand ~ that 
elbow was pinning my upper arm — 
and by the wrist with his other hand. I 
didn't feel much weight on the soles of 
my feet. I had a nice bruise on one 
shoulder blade and several mbbed 
spots. I was breathing hard. He was 
breathing hard. I asked him when was 
the last time he had brushed his teeth. 

He pulled me forward and banged 
me back against the wall again. I felt 
nasty things in various places. 

"You don't talk," he said. "I got ’ 
something to tell you." 

I decided to let him have his air 
time. 

"I don't like you here. You're tres- 
passing outside of your place, mister." 

"Wait a second, pal, you don't 
understand, I think. I don't have 
anything to do with you. The only 
reason — " 

Slam. Distantly, I thought I heard 
my mother call my name. 

"You don't have nothin' to do with 
nothin'. I don't like you here. I want 
you to go. You got me?" I felt him 
tense up for another slam. "Don't say 
nothin' but yes or no. You got me?" 

I felt my teeth, clamped. Felt myself 
breathing hard through my nose. I told 
him yes. 

He let me go and walked off down 
the hall. 


90 


Fantasy & Science Fiction 


All right. So I'm not Superman. I 
made my way to my windowless room 
and had some supper. 

Later, while I was working on des- 
sert, Jeff dropped by. He asked if I had 
a cigarette. 

I gave him one, lit another for my- 
self. 'To what do I owe the honor of 
this visit?" 

He pulled up the chair. Its legs 
groaned against the linoleum. 

"A couple of things, I guess. Main- 
ly, I wanted to find out what you think 
about all this." 

"I don't think much about it at this 
point. It's a job. One I've barely gotten 
any headway on." 

"I see. And I'm supposed to respect 
this professional reserve of yours." 

I shrugged. 

"Listen, friend. I'm not a very re- 
spectful person." He leaned forward, 
peering into my glass. "What's that 
you're drinking?" 

I got up, fetched the other glass, 
poured for him. 

He sniffed, smiled and sipped. 
'That's nice." 

"All right, I said, and sat on the 
edge of the bed. "One thing I think is 
that you're all scared of something. 
When I mentioned Kraus at dinner last 
night — even though you should have 
been expecting it — everyone at that 
table, including you, froze like a wino 
at the sound of breaking glass. And I 
think you came here to check me .out 
about whatever it is you're afraid of." 


I wasn't sure why 1 didn't mention my 
business with Anderson. I guess I just 
wasn't feeling very trustful in general, 
right then. 

Jeff sucked his teeth for a moment, 
staring at his drink, then abruptly lean- 
ed forward, putting elbows on knees. 
"Listen, we are all afraid. We're afraid 
the project's going to be shut down. 
Because of this mess with Kraus. 
You've got to understand that we've 
found something, here. Something 
very valuable to us." 

I shook my head. "How do you 
know you've found something?" 

"Hey, of course we've found some- 
thing. It's there. What you mean is: 
'How do we know we've found some- 
thing good for us?' And that's off the 
point. Good by whose standards? The 
point is, it is valuable to us right now," 

I nodded. "Acknowledged. I have 
no right judging." I swirled my drink, 
sipped it. 'Tou know, you sound al- 
most mystical about this. Religious." 

He shrugged and leaned back in his 
chair. "I don't believe any of us thinks 
of it like that. I don't. But I guess you 
could interpret it that way. If you want 
to." 

I sipped. He sipped. Then I said, 
"There's been at least one person who 
died Elsewhere...." 

"Two, altogether." 

"Well, why should Kraus...." 

He was shaking his head. "Differ- 
ent. This project is considered danger- 
ous, like flight test, say. The govern- 
ment is prepared for a certain amount 


One Way Ticket To Elsewhere 


91 


of deaths. But Kraus isn't dead. The 
closest analog they can think of is cra- 
zy. That scares 'em." 

"Okay ... I want you to know I'm 
not here to close down the program. I 
have nothing to do with that decision. 
I'm just here to look for Kraus, wher- 
ever he disappeared to inside his head 
or Elsewhere or whatever." I swallow- 
ed the rest of my drink. Jeff finished 
his. "As a matter of fact, it occurs to 
me that if I do find him, then your 
problem is solved, too. More than like- 
ly-" 

Jeff got up and went over to the 
dresser with his empty glass. I thought 
he was going to help himself to another 
drirdc and readied a remark, but he 
didn't. He set the glass down and held 
it down, said, "Okay. I believe you. 
And agree with your reasoning." He 
paused, stood still for a moment, then 
let go of the glass and turned around. 
"Okay. There's something else I want 
to tell you." 

"Oh?" 

"Yeah. There's something fishy go- 
ing on in the project, and Kraus was 
onto it." 

"Like what?" 

"I'm not sure. Let me tell you what 
I know." 

I gave him a cigarette to help him 
verbalize, gave me one to listen with. 

"Kraus came to my room one even- 
ing, just a couple days before his ... 
whatever. Anderson was there, and we 
had been shooting the shit. Kraus — 
well, let me explain first that Kraus 


isn't just a participant, he's also a Lab 
Coat. Me too, for that matter. Was. I 
dropped my Lab Coat duties. Kraus 
didn't. My speciality was psych; 
Kraus's, computers. Anyway, he came 
in, sat around moodily for a few min- 
utes, finally said he had run across 
something peculiar. He had discover- 
ed, it seems, that someone had been 
making unauthorized copies of experi- 
mental data." 

"Who?" 

"He didn't know." 

"Did he take this upstairs?" 

"I don't think he had at that time. I 
don't know if he did after we talked. I 
told him I thought he should. Some- 
thing like that could have caused 
enough security to be called down to 
ruin the project for us. Best, I thought, 
to get it cleared up as fast as possible. 
But it's entirely possible he didn't. He 
could be a stubborn, independent bas- 
tard sometimes, and it would have 
been like him to try and handle this all 
by himself." 

"Is this all you, know?" 

"Yeah." 

"It's not much." 

% 

"I know," he said ruefully. 

"So somebody was pilfering data, 
and Kraus found out about it, though 
he didn't find out who. But you think 
'who' found out about Kraus." 

"It looks kind of like it, doesn't it?" 

"Yes," I said. "You know, Langley 
didn't say anything to me about this. 
So Kraus evidently didn't talk to him." 

"I guess so. Though maybe he's just 


92 


Fantasy & Science Fiction 


not saying. I do know he doesn't like 
having you here and that he's not the 
one who called you in. That came from 
higher up." 

"Um-hum. Langley seems to take 
any kind of problem with the program 
personally.... You know a lot about 
things having to do with me, don't 
you. Mind reader?" 

He smiled. "No, just a dossier 
reader. I may not be a Lab Coat any- 
more, but I still have my connections. 1 
told them that if they let me look at the 
file. I'd let them use that rectal ther- 
mometer they've been waving at me. 
And, incidentally, you're not going to 
find anything useful in that one." 

I picked up Kraus's folder from the 
table beside my bed, weighed it in my 
hand. "I didn't. Pretty innocent-look- 
ing document, here, that somebody 
wanted stamped closed.,.. What about 
Anderson?" 

"Anderson...? Oh. No, Anderson's 
too loyal to the project. Anyway — 
and don't tell him I said this — 1 don't 
think he's quite bright enough to pull it 
off." He smiled. "You know, I just 
heard him tell somebody, 'An expand- 
ed vocabulary is an expanded hori- 
zon.'" He shook his head. 

I snorted. Homilies not-withstand- 
ing, I wasn't flattered. I said, "Did you 
take it upstairs?" 

'No," he said and looked uncom- 
fortable. 

"Why not?" 

He sighed. "Well, to tell you the 
truth, I guess I was hoping it might go 


away. It's one thing to recommend 
somebody else take action on some- 
thing; it's another to take it yourself. 
I'm not defending that. I don't have to 
. . . but I do think I would have taken it 
upstairs before long. I just told you 
about it." 

"You did ... and as I said. I'm not 
here to judge. And as you said, I have 
no right to ... so, where are we now...? 
In the middle of nowhere, it seems. Is 
there anybody else Kraus might have 
talked to about this?" 

"If I had to guess, I'd say no. But it 
would only be a guess. Listen, I'm go- 
ing to go now." 

I nodded. 

"If you need anything. I'm on 
2257." 

He left. And left me with some 
things to think about. 

The next morning I went down to 
the cafeteria for some breakfast. After 
spending the evening thinking, I hadn't 
come up with anything about the situa- 
tion here except that it left a bad taste 
that Hennessey's didn't cut. Maybe I 
should have cleared out, as Anderson 
had recommended. And maybe I 
didn't because, as Jeff had so delicately 
mentioned, 1 had quite a reputation in 
certain circles, and I didn't want to see 
a mark in the debit side of their ledgers 
... maybe ... the hell with maybes ... 
let it go. 

Anderson had been at breakfast. 
He had said nothing. Stared at me. 

I walked down to the projection 


One Way Ticket To Elsewhere 


93 


room. I was still sore, in more ways — 
as well as places — than one. That 
head-gimp, Anderson. You're trespass- 
ing outside of your place, mister. I 
wondered where he'd picked up that 
phrase. I doubted he had the intellec- 
tual stamina to put it together all by 
himself. I had an appointment to talk 
to Langley this evening. It might be 
best to mention this Anderson business 
to him. rd decide later. In the mean- 
time, I had an appointment Elsewhere, 
alone. The Elsewhere Kraus had disap- 
peared from. 

I stood up inside the elevator. I 
stared at those two buttons beside the 
door. I raised my hand; I pointed a 
finger; I pressed the DOWN button. 

When the door opened, I stepped 
out. 

About the only difference I notic- 
ed, following the path through the ana- 
tomical junkyard, from the last time I 
had passed this way was that the sky, 
still a low mottling of deep grays, was 
now almost motionless. And there was 
something strange about these clouds. 
I had the feeling, looking up at them, 
that their placement, their distribution, 
was not random. That they were ar- 
ranged to form some kind of obscure 
pattern, or perhaps a word or words 
that I couldn't quite make out. It was a 
disturbing feeling. 

I followed the path to the wall and 
got ready to jump into it. I determined 
this time not to fall on the other side. I 
took my jump slower and got myself in 


a better position to land. 

Like the last time, I disappeared. 

Then I was passing through a sear- 
ing, utter despair. 

I was out of it, flashing through a 
moment of deep red; then I was going 
through it again. An interlude of 
black, and again despair.. And despair 
... and despair... 

...And I was out, landing on my 
feet and gasping for breath, and able to 
feel not only relief but also the desire 
for relief.... 

It took a couple minutes before I 
felt like going on. 

I followed the path and felt uneasy, 
the aftertaste of that despair stUl with 
me. I heard a sound as something 
crumbled away and fell, behind me. I 
spun. 

And saw nothing threatening. One 
of the anatomical junkpiles had simply 
toppled, that was all. Pieces had been 
scattered across the path ... into an al- 
most-pattem ... a word I couldn't quite 
make out. 

I walked on. Came to the white 
guardrail, then to the escalator, which 
didn't descend fast enough to suit me 
— I walked down it. Into the white 
water's roar. I stayed well away from 
the river. Mixed in with the sound of it 
was a roared, hissed, whispered word I 
couldn't quite make out. 

I found myself walking quickly. 

Splashed in primary colors across 
thq cliff was a word I couldn't quite 
make out. 

I decided it was time to go back. I'd 


94 


Fantasy & Science Fiction 


seen enough for my first time in 
Kraus's landscape. I was already walk- 
ing — hurrying. No point in wasting 
any more time here. 

I hurried to the escalator, took the 
steps two at a time. Hurried to the 
wall, paused, took a deep breath and 
juinped into it. Passed through the 
same despair and red and black and 
despair. This time I didn't pause on the 
other side. I hurried along the path. 

And stopped at a fork. 

I didn't remember that. 

Left, right ... I felt paralyzed with 
the idea that this wasn't fair. Then I got 
a grip on myself. The solution to this 
dilemma was simple: pick one at ran- 
dom, keep track of where it took me, 
backtrack if it didn't pan out. There 
was nothing on my heels; I would set- 
tle down and watch what I was doing. 

I chose the right. Before long, with 
relief, I saw the waiting interior of an 
open elevator. 

When I stepped out, I found my- 
self, this time, not in the middle of the 
projection room, but behind the cur- 
tain at the foot of the couch. The cur- 
tain had been open when I left. I push- 
ed through into the room. The curtain 
next to mine was closed, too. There 
had been three Lab Coats here before. 
Now there was one, and she sat at the 
console with her back to me. I said, 
"What — everybody go to lunch or 
something?" 

Still with her back to me she said, 
"Yes, sir." 

"A little early for lunch, isn't it?" I 


didn't think I'd been Elsewhere that 
long. 

"Yes, sir." 

"I'm not your boss. You don't have 
to call me sir." 

"Yes, sir." 

There was no sarcasm in her voice, 
which meant to me a kind of servitude 
I'd always found cloying. I wondered if 
she was the same Lab Coat that 
Langley had given a hard time about 
smoking. I said, "Got a cigarette? I left 
mine in my room." I walked over, 
leaned against the edge of the console. 

And saw her face. 

She didn't really have one. 

It was all blank, sickly-pale skin ex- 
cept for a round aperture centered in 
the lower half that looked more like a 
sphincter than a mouth. The sphincter 
dilated. 

"Yes, sir." 

Chills brushed one side of my face. 

I backed away. Realized I was still 
backing away when I bumped into a 
curtain. I looked over my shoulder: it 
was the closed curtain beside the one I 
had come out of. I turned so that my 
back was neither to the Lab Coat nor 
the curtain. And pulled it open. 

Lying on the couch there, curled up 
on its side in a fetal position, back to- 
ward me, was something vaguely hu- 
man-shaped and more than human- 
sized. It was naked. Its skin was red- 
dish and rubbery looking. 

Slowly, carefully I pulled the cur- 
tain closed. 

The Lab Coat was at console, seem- 


One Way Ticket To Elsewhere 


95 


ingly paying no attention to me. I 
looked around. I had no idea whether I 
was in any danger here, but decided to 
get the hell out, regardless. 

If I could. 

I opened the projection-room door 
and looked out into the hallway. It 
wasn't the hallway. Greenish-yellow 
things crawled with sucking noises 
over fleshy looking cave walls. I slam- 
med the door shut. 

I thought to look behind the cur- 
tain rd come through. The elevator 
was there, door open. I didn't waste 
much time getting into it. Pressed the 
DOWN button. It let me off in the ana- 
tomical junkyard. I was happy to see it 
again. I retraced my path, found the 
fork, took the other branch. Saw a 
waiting, open elevator. It took me 
back to the place I knew. 

I had a shower and some lunch, feeling 
the while that I had been experiencing 
too much to absorb. I did my best to 
shake the feeling; there were things to 
be done: talk with Jeff over supper, my 
appointment with Langley after that, 
and, right now, some research. 

I had everybody's file sent up to my 
room. I wanted to see if I could find 
anything that would point out a con- 
nection of some kind. Anything. I got 
several hundred pages of material. For- 
tunately, it was easy to weed through: 
there was a great deal of uselessness 
like height, weight and medical histo- 
ries. The first thing I checked for was 


anyone with past ties to Kraus, 
through school or profession. I didn't 
think I woulcl get anything from it, but 
it would give me a place to start and a 
pattern for my first run-through of the 
material. I was right. I didn't get any- 
thing. I did, however, discover that I 
liked doing this — working with small, 
dry, simple, dependable things that be- 
haved as one expected. Those file fold- 
ers and sheets of paper felt very reas- 
suring in my hands. 

And I knew this feeling wouldn't last. 

That was a depressing thought. As 
I tried to go on reading in Langley's file 
about his employment history at Cy- 
bertech Research (a wholly owned sub- 
sidiary of Webber Communications), I 
was distracted by a powerful wish that 
I was somewhere sitting in an armchair 
beside a fire, snifter in hand, surround- 
ed by the sound of Bach's Fifth Suite 
for Unaccompanied Cello, 

The hands of my Travalarm mov- 
ed, squeezing the afternoon smaller. 

"Five ... four ... three ... two ... 
one ... Mark." 

And I was in the elevator. Kraus's 
landscape waited outside the door. I 
had an idea, something I wanted to 
check out. It seemed like a long shot, 
but all I had to do was press that but 
ton and go see if it would pay off. 

I pressed it. 

Conversation with Jeff over sup- 
per, last evening. 


96 


Fantasy & Science Fiction 


"What about the anatomical junk- 
yard, then?" I had asked him. "What is 
it?" (And as I remembered this, I step- 
ped over an arm, hand palm-down, 
curved fingers looking as if they'd been 
frozen as they clawed the ground.) 

"You want me to describe to you 
something you've seen for yourself?" 

"Come on. You know what I 
mean." 

"Yeah, I do," he said. "And I an- 
swered your question. You've seen it 
for yourself. Look, suppose I ask you, 
say, what is a tree?" 

(I walked past a lopped head that 
sat, silently and impassively staring in- 
to the eyes of another head across the 
path.) 

"Okay," he went on, "you could 
tell me about colloids and chlorophyll. 
Or you could tell me about its niche in 
the eco-system. Or you could tell me 
it's what junk mail is made out of. But 
the point is, the tree is. You wouldn't 
have been telling me what the tree is; 
you'd have been fitting the tree into the 
context of knowledge I already have. 
You see, I did answer your question. If 
I were to give you the answer you 
wanted, though. I'd be turning what I 
was telling you about into something 
that junk mail is made out of." 

(I noticed a foot, in the middle of 
the path, just before the wall, as if it 
had fallen off as someone jumped 
through, and they had left it behind.) 

"You still don't get it, do you? 
Look, after a few visits, you begin to 
see Elsewhere and here as two equally 


valid existences. The fact that when 
I'm Elsewhere I've left a body behind 
that could starve to death and end me. 
Elsewhere, everything, doesn't mean 
that my experience Elsewhere is inva- 
lid; it means the states have become in- 
terdependent. It means I'm a person 
who has been and is a lot of things. 
Means I'm somebody who brushes his 
teeth twice a day, who was once bitten 
by an organ grinder's monkey, who 
likes loud conversations over pitchers 
of beer. And somebody who walks 
Elsewhere — who, when he comes 
back, will lunch on a tuna salad sand- 
wich and a cube of lime Jello with grat- 
ed carrot in it, then go throw away his 
junk mail." 

And I came out of the wall. I had 
passed through that terrible despair, 
and as I now walked through the sec- 
ond stretch of the anatomical junk- 
yard, I saw all the parts and pieces as 
the detritus of that despair. 

Behind me something crumbled 
away and toppled. I turned and look- 
ed: the debris had fallen into an al- 
most-word. 

I took the escalator down to the 
whispering, hissing, roaring, frustrat- 
ingly unintelligible white water. (Re- 
membering: Langley had leaned over 
his desk, and like the first time, his 
badge had flashed at me.) 

The water roared and reached for 
me, and I withstood its attraction and 
almost, almost understood what it was 
saying. (When I'd finished telling him 


One Way Ticket To Elsewhere 


97 


about Kraus, Langley'd said, 'I'm go- 
ing to tell you just one thing.../') 

The river rushed violently under- 
ground. I came to the vantage point 
before the cliff, saw the illegible word 
splashed there in primary colors. 
("...You are trespassing outside of 
your place, mister," Langley had said. 
And while I was in his office, I hadn't 
thought to mention my run-in with 
Anderson to him.) 

I stomped on the ground. 

Colors flashed about the plain. On 
the cliff, the colors trembled, shook 
out of their almost-pattem. And fell in- 
to place. 

You are trespassing outside of your 
place, Mister. 

I had seen what I came for and 
wasn't happy. Kraus probably hadn't 
been happy to hear it. I turned to go. 

Langley had been standing behind 
me. A pace behind him and to his right 
stood Anderson. 

'Oh, God," said Langley, looking 
up at the cliff. "I knew it. I just knew 
it." He looked down at me. "You 
couldn't leave well enough alone, 
could you. You had to bring me to 
this." He waved Anderson forward. 
"He gets the same treatment as Kraus. I 
think that would look most plausible." 

"Listen, pal," I said. "I'm not mak- 
ing you do anything. You're choosing 
it." 

Anderson started toward me, going 
around Langley's right. I bolted in the 
other direction, toward the river. 

It took them a fraction of a second 


to react. I ran like I had JATOs strap- 
ped to my back. I was sure -I was 
widening the lead. 

That bastard Anderson tackled me. 

It is very difficult, even for two 
people, to hold onto somebody who's 
struggling as hard as he can. It's even 
more difficult to hold onto him and 
drag him somewhere. 

It's easier if you don't mind beating 
up on him. 

They dragged me to the edge of the 
river. 

The water was lapping and splash- 
ing and frothing, reaching out its gray- 
green hands. It roared and hissed and 
whispered. I struggled. All other 
sounds were absorbed by the water — 
scufflings against the ground, rustle of 
clothing, slap of skin against skin, 
grunts of effort and pain. Seemingly 
emerging from the roar came glimpses 
of Anderson's face, and Langley's, 
flushed red and bearing grotesque ex- 
pressions. I struggled. 

And one of my feet came free. I 
kicked out, connected with something. 
My other foot came free. Then, in an 
instantaneous flash, came a clearer pic- 
ture of my situation: Langley was 
clutching his shin; Anderson was on 
his hands and knees, astraddle my 
face, and under his hands was one of 
my forearms, under his knees, my 
other. He was shouting for Langley's 
help. I curled up at the waist, carefully 
and precisely kicked Anderson on the 
ear. 

Then I was free, scrambling to my 


98 


Fantasy & Science Fiction 


feet, running like hell along the river 
toward the escalator. I figured my only 
chance was to get to the elevator, then 
into the projection room and the com- 
pany of witnesses. 

I heard their footsteps behind me, 
but didn't slow myself down by look- 
ing back. Heard the roared, hissed, 
whispered and still unintelligible voice 
of the river. 

Then I was on the escalator, 
pounding up the steps, and knew one 
of them, probably Anderson, was clos- 
Jng* 

I got to the top, running, getting 
winded, and knew Td never make it to 
the elevator. 

I cut to the side, off the path, be- 
tween two big piles of discarded anato- 
my, scrambled over a smaller pile, 
doubling back, then crouched in a 
good spot, just off the path, out of 
sight from it. I knew what I was going 
to do. As I tried — quietly — to catch 
my breath, I looked around me, select- 
ed a good piece. It was part of a hand: 
big enough to have a nice heft, but not 
unwieldy. All the fingers were broken 
off fairly short. There were a lot of jag- 
ged edges. 

It would have to be in the face, I 
decided. Facial wounds bleed like cra- 
zy. 

I heard cautious footsteps, got my- 
self in position. 

The footsteps came closer. 

I heard rustling sounds from sever- 
al places around me. 

The hair on the back of my neck 


stood up. I checked myself over fran- 
tically, probing and looking at my fin- 
gertips, and finally saw the front of my 
shirt. 

It was red. 

I had a god-damned bloody nose. 

There was a small avalanche of 
body parts from the pile next to me, 
and a long, gray, wrinkled tube poked 
out. 

I jumped up, out onto the path. 
And found myself staring right into 
Anderson's startled face. I smashed it 
with the stone hand. 

And ran. 

After a moment risked a look back. 
Langley was skirting the fallen Ander- 
son, running toward me. I hardly 
noticed him. I was looking at an enact- 
ment of the scene Jeff had described. 
Saw Anderson open his mouth to 
scream.... 

I ran again. 

Langley was right behind me. I 
made it to the wall, still ahead of him, 
jumped in... 

... came out of the despair and the 
colors of despair, and without hesita- 
tion picked up where I'd left off in my 
running. And Langley was still behind 
me. He must have been as desperate as 
I was. I thought, then, about stopping 
to fight him. But I'm not good in a 
fight. And the elevator was close. 

I came to a place where the path 
curved right. With Langley as close be- 
hind me as an ice cube down the back 
of my shirt, I didn't take time to delib- 
erate on the fact that there had once 


One Way Ticket To Elsewhere 


99 


been a fork here, with a path curving 
left, too. I kept running. 

So did Langley. 

The elevator was just ahead of me, 
open and waiting. I ran into it, stopped 
myself with flat palms against the 
back. 

Then, suddenly, a tableau: I stood 
just inside the elevator, my thumb on 
the UP button; Langley stood just out- 
side, an incredulous expression on his 
face. 

Just as the door started to close, his 
shoulders slumped, and he stepped in- 
side. ''So,'' he said. "This is it. It's all 
over." 

I concentrated on breathing. Didn't 
answer him. Didn't mention we were 
in the wrong elevator. 

The door opened. I saw that closed 
curtain and had an idea. "That's right, 
Langley, this is it." I took him by the 
arm, hustled him through the curtain 
and let it fall closed, hiding the eleva- 
tor. The Lab Coat was sitting at her 
console, back toward us. I said to her, 
"You have a code you can enter into 
that thing to send for security, don't 
you?" 

"Yes, sir." 

"Then send for them." 

"Yes, sir." 

I was bull-shitting, hoping Langley 
was bureaucrat enough not to know 
the workings too well. 

He said, shaking his head, "Over." 
We stood there, awkward. I watched 
him. For a few moments he avoided 
looking at me, then met my gaze and 


said, "What was I suppose^ to do?" 
There was a suggestion of pleading in 
his voice. 

"Don't ask for anything from me." 
I walked to the door and leaned against 
it, both to keep him from trying to go 
through and to get him facing away 
from the Lab Coat. 

* "Listen to me. When I was in the 
space program, I went up for one 
flight, do you realize that? One lousy 
flight in the space shuttle, and they 
closed the program.... Do you remem- 
ber John Glenn? Are you old enough 
to remember about him? They treated 
that man like a god-damn king. Like 
the god-damn savior of the world. I 
work for twenty god-damn years, and 
they shut the program down." His 
words I sounded almost rehearsed. 
Maybe he'd said them to himself be- 
fore, late at night. He started to run his 
hand through his hair, then *held it 
there on top of his head. "When that 
man from Webber came to my little of- 
fice at Cybertech, I listened to him." 
As the hand came slowly down he 
said, "You know, he told me that 
funds previously allocated to NASA 
are now going to the project, here," 
and he spread both hands between us. 
"I'm entitled to something." When I 
said nothing, he let the hands drop, 
turned toward the Lab Coat. 

"Not to kill," I said quickly. 

He turned back to me. "I didn't." 

I didn't say anything. 

"Listen to me. Anderson told me 
about Kraus. And because Kraus didn't 


100 


Fantasy & Science Fiction 


come to me, he had to have known it 
was me. I just couldn't lose everything. 
Not again. That's understandable, isn't 
it?" 

I still didn't say anything. 

"Shit." He put his face in his hands. 
I heard him say, muffled, "I was just 
doing what I could with what was pre- 
sented to me ... just — " Then, "Shit." 
And before I could stop him, he went 
over to the Lab Coat and put his hand 
on her shoulder, saying, "Get those 
security people in here for God's sake. 
I want to get this over with." 

His hand on her shoulder caused 
her chair to swivel around until she 
faced him. 

'Tes, sir." 

He stared for a long time, maybe 
two seconds. Then he jerked his hand 
from her shoulder. Jerked himself stiff- 
ly upright. Turned — jerkily — to me. 
'"What the hell...?" 

The jig was up. 

"You...." He pressed his lips to- 
gether, looked around the room. I 
guess he thought he'd been set up, was 
looking for hidden witnesses before he 
started taking me apart. He stalked 
past me to the door, opened it and im- 
mediately slammed it shut. Stalked 
over to the cvirtains, pulled open the 
one next to the one we'd come 
through. 

The naked rubbery thing on the 
couch rolled over and sat up. It looked 
right at Langley. 

Its head was twice as big as it 
should have been with tiny lidless eyes. 


like a fish's, all but buried in folds of 
rubbery flesh. It had two nostril slits 
where a nose might have been, and its 
mouth was wide, like a toad's. It stood 
up. It must have been over eight feet 
tall. It was hermaphroditic. Then it 
opened its mouth. I saw what seemed 
like hundreds of tiny pointed teeth, 
curved inward so that something could 
have been pushed in past them but not 
pulled out — anything half-swallowed 
and struggling would only work its 
way farther in. It was the mouth of 
something that swallowed big things, 
whole. And the sound.... 

The roar of white water, the seduc- 
tive sound of the river's rapids, came 
out of that creature's open mouth. 
Mixed in with the sound was the roar- 
ed, hissed, whispered word which now 
I understood: 

Langley. 

He tried to get away. 

The creature's hands were huge and 
powerful. 

Jeff lit up another of my cigarettes. 

I was saying, "...My best guess 
about Anderson is that he was just be- 
ing loyal to the program. I think Lang- 
ley had convinced him that first Kraus 
and then I were threats to the program. 
Which, I suppose, could have been in- 
terpreted as true." 

I poured myself a little more bran- 
dy. "It doesn't look now as if we'll ever 
know for sure. Some loose ends never 
get tied up." 


One Way Ticket To Elsewhere 


101 


"What about Webber Communica- 
tions; what did they want with our 
data?" 

"Are you kidding? Think what 
they could do once enough elements in 
the landscape Elsewhere had been codi- 
fied to the point where someone could 
actually program an experience. 
You ve already been doing this to a 
certain extent with the elevators during 
the opening and closing transitions. 
Think what kind of an entertainment 
medium it would make with the com- 
bination of programmed landscape 
and volitional specator." 

He shook his head. "Think of the 
advertisements . " 

I preferred not to. 

"So you did your job/' Jeff said. 
"You found Kraus. Dumped in the 
river. Well, we know what to avoid 
now if we don't want to be dissolved 
throughout the landscape. I don't 
think it'll do the project much good, 
though. Too bad you couldn't have 
brought him back. Brought them all 
back." 

I nodded. 

"Listen, you've got this talent for 
finding things. Maybe you can find me 
another job." 


I returned his sad smile. 

He asked me what I was going to 
do now. 

I told him about an appointment I 
had with an armchair and a fireplace 
and a record. 

And on my way to that appoint- 
ment, I thought a lot about some 
things. About how I had done my job 
to the letter of the agreement, and ev- 
erybody, including myself, seemed to 
have lost something. About the people 
who would be cleaning up the mess I'd 
left behind — the orderlies and nurses 
who would be taking care of Kraus and 
Langley, the people in shirtsleeves who 
would be microfilming and shredding 
the papers and inventorying the equip- 
ment, the man in the dark suit who 
would be calling on Langley's wife to 
make explanations, the ones who 
would be burying Anderson. Thought 
about Jeff.... Maybe the project 
wouldn't fold after all, and he could 
stay. ... Or maybe Webber would keep 
their own project going and he could 
get hired on with them. . . . Or maybe he 
would become a person who had, at 
one time, walked Elsewhere.... Maybe 
— the hell with maybes.... Let it go. 



102 


Fantasy & Science Fiction 


COMEXCALIBUR 


Films 

BAIRD 

SEARLES 



Only a generation or so ago, if you 
were seeking fantasy — pure fantasy, 
as it were, not s/f or ghost stories or 
whimsy — it was a precious small 
field. There were classics such as Dun- 
sany and Morris, prodigies from that 
unlikeliest of pulp magazines. Un- 
known, such as Leiber's Gray Mouser 
stories, and odd juveniles. The Hobbit, 
for one. And there were the comics. 

Nowadays fantasy — pure fantasy, 
heroic fantasy — is BIG. Credit for this 
can be laid to the Great Kindler, Tol- 
kien; but the promulgation thereof, de- 
spite the best efforts of the written 
word (those best efforts ranging from 
dear old 'Two Gun" Bob Howard to 
the enchanting Patricia McKillip) 
should be credited to the comics. 

Now, a whole generation, some of 
which cannot or will not read, is gear- 
ed to the idea of created kingdoms and 
worlds, magically endowed heroes and 
heroines, and inhuman characters 
from the endearing to the unspeakable. 

This month I am given two mass- 
media productions that are true fan- 
tasy. I first thought to do them in one 
column, but they both engender so 
many calories for thought that I will 
risk being even more cifter-the-fact 
than usual and devote a piece to each, 
unless some more vital subject comes 
along (a musical of Lovecraft's "The 
Dunwich Horrors," for instance). First, 
Excalibur, next. Fugitive From the Em- 
pire. 


Drawing by Cahan Wilson 

Films and Television 


103 



The Arthurian saga, despite its lit- 
erary manifestations, is in essence folk- 
lore and acceptable fantasy even when 
fantasy was at its lowest ebb. There- 
fore we have a surprising number of 
Arthur films from the past: MGM's al- 
most completely unfantastic Knights of 
the Round Table, lushly produced, 
with an equally lush Ava Gardner as 
Guinevere and the bland Lancelot of 
Robert Taylor; the grim French Lance- 
lot of the Lake with no fantastic ele- 
ments at all; Disney's The Sword in the 
Stone, which almost achieved the 
charm of the T.H. White novel; the 
sickeningly 1940s Arthurian court of A 
Connecticut Yankee etc., complete 
with Bing Crosby; Camelot, arguably 
good, but with a production of ravish- 
ingly fairy-tale quality and the noblest 
Gwen of them all, Vanessa Redgrave. 

But nobody has given us as much 
Arthur as John Boorman in Excalibur 
— soup to nuts, Uther to Avalon, we 
get every major aspect of the tale, two- 
and-a-half hours worth. And it's as 
much a failure as his Zardoz was a tri- 
umph; Boorman, who showed a super- 
abundance of intelligence in the earlier 
s/f film, seems perversely and deliber- 
ately to have used none of it on the 
fantasy. He has given us a two-and-a- 
half hour comic strip (not animated 
film; comic strip). 

Now I have nothing against com- 
ics. I lived on them as a child (one of 
the few ways — see above — to get my 
fantasy fix), and as a nominal adult, 
concede that they have an esthetic and, 

104 


at their best, can be supremely artistic 
and/or intelligent. I, like so many sci- 
ence fiction readers, do tend to resent 
their confusion with s/f in the public 
mind (the French tend to think of them 
as one and the same thing entirely). 

And at their worst (and the per- 
centage of euphemism is even higher 
than Sturgeon's law allows), comics 
are revolting. (What isn't, of course, 
but this is the topic of the month.) 
Even if the art is superb, and often 
these days it is, there is a necessary 
simplification of content, sometimes to 
the point of simple-mindedness, be- 
cause of what can be communicated in 
drawing and minimal wordage; com- 
plicated concepts just don't work. This 
is, interestingly enough, a problem 
shared by film, but film simply has 
more room for information. If the ma- 
terial is original, it can be tailored to 
this problem; comic adaptations of 
material from other media can, and us- 
ually do, send anyone that cares about 
that material up the wall. 

In Excalibur, Boorman has adopt- 
ed, presumably deliberately, this kind 
of approach; the enormous amount of 
material is done with a speed and flat- 
ness of content, dialogue and charac- 
terization that can only be compared 
to the comics; the people in the MGM 
version seem like characters from 
Proust in comparison. And when one is 
aware of the myriad literary variations 
woven on these great themes, the film 
becomes downright offensive. (And I 
don't mean that in terms of Great Liter- 

Fantasy & Science Fiction 


ature; Rosemary Sutcliff's ruthlessly 
realistic Sword At Sunset is as fine in 
its way as Naomi Mitchison's viciously 
funny To the Chapel Perilous.) 

Visually also, Boorman goes for the 
splediferously obvious: the settings of 
huge, bloody suns, lots and lots of fog, 
an enchanted cavern of monumental, 
Disney-worldly vulgarity, and silver- 
chrome-armoured knights that look 
just off the Detroit assembly line. Even 
the nature shots, of that unearthly 
greenery that only appears in the Brit- 
ish isles, seem forced and arty. 

I have a particular and personal 
disgust at the music, quotes from Car- 


mina Burana, Tristan, and (1 think) 
Siegfried, used over and over and trim- 
med to fit whatever scene they accom- 
panied. Classical music has been used 
well in cinema, but this is pure low- 
budget, pom film technique. 

The actors did as well as they could 
in two dimensions in every direction. 1 
thought Cherie Lunghi's frowzy, rock- 
singer look way off for Guinevere, and ‘ 
the performance of the eminent Nicol 
Williamson as Merlin was watered- 
down, Guinness thin. 

This Excalibur wasn't found in a 
rock; it was found under it. 



Films and Television 


105 



In which two affectionals meet for a drink in a cafe and 
discuss flowers and slaughter.... 


There the Lovelies 
Bleeding 

BY 

BARRY N. MALZBERG 


W 


I e can change/' Helga 
says. Her pained eyes open to depths 
of luminescence. "We backslide, gov- 
ernments fail us, our leaders betray us, 
but in infinitesimal ways the human 
soul, the human heart can be taught to 
apprehend; it is different now than it 
was in the sixties. People are kinder, 
warmer, more open, more vulnera- 
ble." 


Helga sips from her glass of bitters, 
a faint tremor in her delicate hand. Her 
expressiveness is to me the most ador- 
ed pa;;t of her, even though from the 
wastes of my own dread I fear that her 
optimism comes from naivete. Robo- 
mechanisms drift by us on skates; the 
thin hum of the conditioners fills the 
cafe. An old man in the comer goes 
spontaneously insane and is trapdoor- 
ed; the odors of his falling persist with 
those of spinach greens. Our robowait- 
er appears at my elbow. "Will there be 


any more?" he says. 

"I would like some coffee," Helga 
says. "I Would like some tea," I say. I 
have given up palliatives as a gesture 
of good will and out of my conviction 
that I dare not mask my feelings for 
Helga with anodynes of any sort. We 
have known each other only a fort- 
night — counting a day on either end 
more or less; it is hard to keep track of 
time as the millennium itself is felt to 
be unwinding — but it is certainly the 
most profound relationship of my life. 
I have had sixteen affectional relation- 
ships and thirty-seven cooperatives 
altogether, but none have ever hit me 
as has Helga. She says that she feels the 
same. Everything that I say to her she 
says back to me with greater force, 
which is one of the reasons that I find 
her lovable; I am possessed of my own 
convictions. Some of them. Some of 
the time. "See, the lovelies bleeding," 


106 


Fantasy & Science Fiction 



Helga says as the waiter skates over 
with our coffee and tea, '*see the cen- 
tury dreaming, see the hearts un- 
known/' She hums a wisp of mel- 
ody under her breath, a Doworini 
concerto, although I am not sure of 
this. This is also one of her lovable 
traits, her disposition to hum at 
strange times and in gentle keys. 
'Tou're not saying much," she says. 
"Are you all right?" 

"I'm listening to you." 

"Do you know what lovelies bleed- 
ing are?" Helga says. 'They are a 
flower, a kind of flower. I looked that 
up in an old glossary: isn't that in- 
teresting?" 

"Surely," I say, "it is all very inter- 
esting. Evocative." Screams from the 
corridors waft into us; clearly it is the 
sound of the slaughterhouse detail 
herding the recalcitrants toward their 
four o'clock re-education, and I wince 
with the pain. "A kind of flower," I 
say. "Life is a kind of flower, its 
blooms dying but exquisite." 

"You're too pessimistic. I told you 
that. Things can get better. It's not the 
way it used to be. Back in the early 
nineties people took the slaughter- 
house details for granted, never talked 
about them. Now there are real move- 
ments against the situation; these 
things are being discussed." 

"Surely," I say. I sip my tea. 
"Nonetheless the slaughters go on." 

"But less so and not without pro- 
test." 

"Perhaps," I say. I give a silent ges- 


ture. Despite the reforms, it is still per- 
haps unwise to discuss the slaughtering 
details in the cafes. Helga's mouth 
forms to an o of understanding. "Per- 
haps we should leave," she says. "We 
could make love; we have the last 
twenty minutes of the shift left." It is 
her disarming directness, her fragility, 
her astonishment at her own bluntness 
which makes her so lovable to me, the 
most profound of my sixteen affection- 
als. I feel profoundly stirred. 

"Why not?" I say. I reach over and 
touch her hand. She caresses back. In 
the fluorescence her hair is first brown, 
then red, shading toward fire, a little 
corona coming from her aspect, 
although this may be only created by 
desire. "Why not?" One of the servo- 
waiters ruptures suddenly with a hol- 
low sound; the explosion shakes the 
cafe. Plastics are thrown over him; he 
is drenched with water and quickly 
rolled away. "The sooner the better," I 
say. 

I signal to our waiter. Shaken by 
the damage incurred by his fellow ma- 
chine, he comes over cautiously. I 
hand him my credito; he takes the im- 
print. "And a good day, sir," he says. 
His metallic eyes glint compassion. 
"And thank you for your courtesies." 

"You see," Helga whispers, "they're 
much better than the old ones. They 
have kindness circuits built in." 

We stand together; our bodies col- 
lide. The touch, the slight incision we 
make against one another is stunning; I 
feel desire supersede dread within me. 


There The Lovelies Bleeding 


107 


Helga takes my arm. "It wouldn't have 
been this way even a few years ago/' 
she says. "We couldn't have had a pub- 
lic affectional; we couldn't have had 
the courage to love one another." 

"Perhaps/' I say. "Perhaps." I am 
diffident. It is easier not to take a posi- 
tion in disagreement: besides, Helga 
may well be right. I have been seeing 
many things differently since our cir- 
cumstance began. Hand in hand we 
walk through the cafe, barely seeing 
the sprawled bodies of the over-ano- 
dyned, the affectionals clutching, the 
cooperatives staring past one another 
at walls the color of plasma. The ser- 
vos part for us as we approach them; 
beam for identity and the absence of 
detonative devices, open the walls and 
let us through. In the corridor brisk 
winds assail us coated with the smell of 
blood. The sounds of the slaughter- 


house grind through the eaves of the 
undersystem. 

"Quickly/' Helga says, taking my 
elbow, "quickly." She propels me 
through the hall, beginning to hum 
Doworini. Enthralled by her, by love, 
by possibility, I follow. 

"It will get better yet," Helga says 
as we approach the hydraulics which 
will take us to our cubicle. "It will get 
better and better yet. Two decades ago 
who would have dreamed we would 
have this much?" 

She is right. In 2978 who would 
have dreamed we would have this 
much? How would I have known my- 
self someday worthy of even this? 

Clutched by love, I wait for lovelies 
bleeding. The odors of slaughter are 
now flowers reaching, bleeding in the 
night. 


Coming Next Month 

32nd ANNIVERSARY ISSUE 

John Brunner 
Avram Davidson 
John Varley 
Philip K. Dick 
Richard Cowper 
George R. R. Martin 
Thomas M. DIsch 
R. Bretnor 
and others 

Watch for the October issue, on sale September 3. 


108 


Fantasy & Science Fiction 


Thomas Wylde C'The Incredibly Thick World,” March 1979) 
offers a fast and furious and not entirely serious story about a 
washroom attendant on a space liner. And you thought the 
action was on the bridge. 


Indigestion 

BY 

THOMAS WYLDE 


T 


I he Gryen businessman 
squeezed my neck between two of his 
coarse grit fingers. "'Can you deliver, 
Bobby?" he asked for probably the 
fifth time since the cruise began — and 
we were still three wormholes and a 
ramjet session from Lesser Magellanic 
Base. 

"Answer me I" 

I tried hard to answer for several 
perplexing seconds before I noticed not 
only wasn't anything coming out, no- 
thing had been going in for quite a 
while. My bugging eyes darted about. 

Nobody in the First Class lounge 
seemed to be interested. Music rattled 
and thumped and plinked. 

The Gryen gentleman tilted his 
head quizzically. "Can't you breathe?" 

A rhetorical question, obviously. 

The Gryen took a moment to 
scratch his bumpy face with an icepick 
fingertip. A pustule burst and half a 


dozen buzzing mites emerged. The 
Gryen s goons scrabbled for them, 
caught and ate them. 

The Gryen brushed his men out of 
the way. "Bobby, Bobby, why won't 
you help me?" 

"Nggnnn." 

"I was told you were the one to 
consult. They told me you could sup- 
ply my wants. They rather got my 
hopes up. Aren't you the least bit sym- 
pathetic?" 

His two-fingered grip relaxed. Sev- 
en or eight molecules of air rushed in to 
fill up my lungs. Good luck, fellas.... 

The Gryen did his "smile" — and 
all three gaping nose holes widened, 
cilia rippling. "I'm a reasonable chap 
when you get to know me." 

More good news.... 

I finally made it back to the can and 
requisitioned a faceful of cool water 


Indigestion 


© 1952 hy Thomas Wylde 


109 



(charging it to the Gryens account). I 
stared at my dripping face. "I hope 
you're happy." 

They never told me washroom at- 
tendant was such a complicated career. 
Fine place for the only "real" man on 
this extragalactic traveling freak show. 

1 grinned. Nothing like a little hu- 
man chauvinism to perk a guy up. Be- 
sides, I'd volunteered — make that 
begged — for a chance to hit the space- 
ways. 

Two Queels pitter-patted into the 
washroom. I put 'em in stalls nine and 
ten, then programmed the pumps. 

Don't get me wrong. I was ready to 
do menial work, ready even for the 
washroom. I'm not proud — especially 
after what happened back home. 

Now I'm not complaining about the 
baksheesh, I can use the bucks. 

And if these weeners want a bit of 
recreational druggy-time, well suffice 
it to say I've sucked up my share of 
black wabba-coiiee. I'm no prude. 

It's just that this job is so damned 
chaotic. They all want something dif- 
ferent — and I'm a trained plastic 
surgeon, not a bloody chemist. 

The Queels shuffled out, arguing in 
sibilants. Suddenly one of them reach- 
ed down the throat of his buddy far 
enough to squeeze some internal organ 
or other. Immediately every hair on 
the both of them stood on end (about a 
meter) and the squeezed Queel ejected 
some purple slime. Out they went. 

I reached for the electric mop like a 
good boy. 


A good thing I had finished the 
SANITIZE cycle before my next pair 
of customers sluiced in — these Beekies 
stick to everything. 

I tried to settle them into booths 
five and six, but they wanted to stay 
together. They whined and I apologiz- 
ed. I'd forgotten Beekies don't dare do 
it alone. 

I cranked up the airlock vacuum 
probe and the automatic scrub brushes 
(medium hard bristles), then checked 
the collector for Queel artifacts. Pay 
dirt. 

While I was packaging the stuff up', 
I thought about my problem with the 
Gryen. 

I'd had several days to consult the 
washroom bible. The dope he wanted 
— insisted on — was so amazingly 
hard to come by I'd let the matter drift, 
hoping he'd forget. (Hal) 

The main problem was one of 
source. There was only one sshmoona 
on the ship, an elderly statesman on his 
way home to die. Gertrude told me 
she'd served him in the diiung room. 
But I'd never had him in my washroom. 

Just my luck he was corked up fine 
as you please. For all I knew it was 
against his religion. 

D spotted the old geezer across the 
dining room by the emergency airlock. 
Gertrude was just setting a speedplate 
before him. I wondered what he was 
eating. ' (This is where the rural 
chemistry comes in.) 


110 


Fantasy & Science Fiction 


I caught Gertrude's eye and wink- 
ed. She frowned, as usual, and hot- 
footed it for the service chute. 

A job-nervous spinster in sensible 
shoes. Her rump was too big. And she 
wore virgin wool socks in bed. On her 
hands. 

But she was all I had. 

I am hopelessly hooked on my own 
species. 

And Gertrude was it this go-round. 

I started out along the perimeter of 
the dining room, trying for a closer 
look at the sshmoonas plate. 

"Glagga ned!" said a low voice. 

I didn't want to turn. "Beg 
pardon?" 

They hustled me into the service al- 
cove — the Gryens goons, all fists and 
teeth and hairy pustules. 

One of them put his mouth in my 
face and said, "Fffikwha!" 

riis breath made my mouth water. 

He held me while his partner plant- 
ed a bomb in my ear. 

"Hello, Bobby," said the bomb. "I 
just wanted to take this opportunity to 
remind you of your obligations. Please 
understand I am a patient man. But re- 
alize, too, Bobby, that patience is a rel- 
ative thing, coerced by natural values, 
defined by culture, and subject to the 
tyranny of genetic material. In short, 
while your own perfectly proper 
rhythms might suggest this matter can 
safely languish for an hour or so. I'm 
afraid the length of my patience — vast 
as it seems to me — measures out your 
grace period in pico-seconds. So, with 


that in mind — bon voyaged 

Then one of the goons made a ges- 
ture with one finger. 

When I could see again, I found 
Gertrude leaning over me. 

"Are you drunk?" she asked, merci- 
ful creature. 

"Wha?" I said. "Hmmm?" I said. 
"Gnnnn," I said. 

She frowned. "And keep your 
hoodlum friends out of the First Class 
dining room." 

"Giggie," I said. 

"Really," she said. "Sometimes I 
wonder about my taste in men." 

She left in a haze of wonderment. 

It didn't matter. I felt perfectly 
comfortable on the floor wedged up 
under the serving chute. There were a 
lot of things on my mind just then. I 
just couldn't think of any one of 
them.... 

"Meab," said the secret recipe 
book. I squinted at the handwritten 
squiggle. "Meab?" So faded — thirty 
years old at least — probably jotted 
down when the first humans shipped 
out as servants on the alien starcruis- 
ers, right after the war. "Meab.... Ah, 
meatr 

But what kind of meat? 

There was a chance it didn't make 
any difference. Some digestive systems 
are like that, stomachs swathed in gen- 
eralities. 

Now the sshmoona,... 

I slammed the little book on the 
scrub counter. Time was running — 


Indigestion 


111 


make that had run — out. 

Dinner was over, but maybe there 
was some sort of snack on the schedule. 

I put the washroom on automatic 
and went looking for Gertrude. 

'"Meat?"' 

''Any kind of meat/' I said. "You 
could maybe cruise by his cabin and 
slip him some meatballs." 

Gertrude glared at me. "Mister, 
your garden's gone to seed." 

I pleaded with her (which is com- 
mon enough in our relationship). 
"They're going to kill me I" 

"Ridiculous I" Then she pointed a 
finger at me. "But if you were to find 
yourself in trouble, it only goes to 
prove what I've been saying. And you 
say you were a doctor I" 

She went on and on. I tuned her 
out for a while. There had to be ways 
to get meat into the sshmoona, even if I 
had to make an up-front deal, sort of 
lay my cards (or a careful selection 
thereof) on the table. 

Then something Gertrude was say- 
ing caught my attention. 

"Wait a second," I said. "What do 
you mean, no meatT* 

"No real meat." She looked at me 
in surprise. "Didn't you at least read 
the brochure on this cruise?" 

"Lady, I had to go so bad I'd've 
signed up as fuel. I didn't read 
nothing." 

She got that superior look that 
seemed so at home on her face. "And 
now look at you." 


I got an emergency call and trotted 
back to the can. 

Three anxious Moggs were lined 
up, each holding a different part of his 
body. Another circus of cooperation. 

Their looks of desperation sold me. 
I opened the Express Lane. "Enjoy!" 

1 was at the console fumbling 
through a tricky analysis when the 
Beekie crept up behind me. (Those wet 
monopods always get the drop on 
you.) 

He held up a pocket tranny mirror. 
I looked in at myself. 

"Greetings, menial," my image said 
to me. "Understand your dilemma, vis- 
a-vis Gryen import-export maggot. 
Beg to supply you with sublime infor- 
mation. Sshmoona-meLn my buddy- 
buddy, he sends still further greetings. 
Wishes to assist, providing he gets 
flesh of high quality and most excellent 
toothsomeness." 

"What else does the gentleman 
want besides meat?" 

"Meat, alone, sufficiency. Ssh- 
moona-man fails to read brochure, 
finds himself on hellhole of spaceship 
without meat. Cravings abominate." 

"Tell him okay." 

"You come now. Bring your meat. 
Cookingness not require." 

The Beekie snatched the mirroi: 
from my face and slid-rolled to the 
door. He looked back at me (I think) 
and waited. 

"Uh, now?" 

The Beekie waited, his undercar- 
riage quivering. 


112 


Fantasy & Science Fiction 


I needed time to think. 

All right, so the sshmoona was ripe 
to cooperate in the saving of my un- 
worthy hide. Great news, greatly wel- 
comed. 

But right at the moment I was hav- 
ing trouble laying my hands on meat. 
Even meat of most shoddy toothsome- 
ness. 

The Beekie gave me the hurry-up 
sign. 

"Uh, look," I said. "Fll go with you 
and talk with the sshmoona gentle- 
man. But only talk, because to tell you 
the truth I don't exactly have any meat 
on me." 

The Beekie whined. He flashed the 
mirror at me. 

"We go nowV' 

I didn't like the look in my eyes. 




Is I followed in the antiseptic path 
of the Beekie, I wondered why the ssh- 
moona had not come to me himself. It 
might have had to do with his age or 
his status, both of which were suffi- 
ciently advanced to command some 
perks. 

But what if it was something else? 

And what was gonna happen when 
I showed up meatless? 

I was doing a good job of spooking 
myself out when I noticed we were 
passing the kitchen. 

"Hold it!" I yelled after the Beekie, 

He turned and raised his tranny 
mirror. 

"I'll just be a second, really," I said. 


pushing open the kitchen service door. 
I flashed half a dozen quick smiles. 
"Just pop in here for an extremely short 
second." 

The mirror's image caught me be- 
tween the eyes. 

"We go nowl No damning fiddle- 
faddle I" 

I'd never seen myself look so fierce. 
I suddenly realized why those outraged 
patients had let me walk out of that 
hospital alley on the night of thy es- 
cape ... I mean, retirement. 

"Go nowl" the mirror growled. 

"Rightaway," I said, ducking fast 
into the kitchen. 

I nearly trampled Gertrude on her 
way out. 

"This kitchen is off-limits!" she 
said. 

I pointed at the glass of milk in her 
hand but didn't have time to call her on 
it. 'There must be meat in here some 
place!" 

"I told you!" 

But I was already striding for the 
food lockers. 

"Get out of my kitchen!" 

"I need meat and I need it now." 

"I told you — " 

"Don't tell me. Find me some meat. 
Okay, so it's a meatless cruise. What a 
cute gimmick — for the paying cus- 
tomers. But surely there's a speck of 
meat lying about — for the crew, may- 
be?" 

She shook her head, then sipped 
her milk. 


indigestion 


113 


I pawed through some racks of fro- 
zen grub. I heard the kitchen door 
opening behind me._ 

I turned and glared at Gertrude. 
The Beekie was sliding in behind her. 
"For emergencies, thenl" 

"Emergency meat.'" Gertrude sniff- 
ed. "I think not." 

The tranny mirror behind her said 
in my voice, "We go now plenty." 
Then to Gertrude, in her face and 
voice: "Excuse, please. I need this man 
to go with me." 

"And welcome to him," she said. 
She turned to me. "Bobby, will T, uh, 
will I see you tonight?" 

"That depends." 

More unpleasantness, either way. 

The Beekie herded me into the ssh- 
moonas cabin and left us alone. The 
sshmoona was curled up on a special 
couch, his two dozen or so feet careful- 
ly arranged. 

rd say he didn't look happy, but 
that's only an opinion based on fear. 

He clitter-clacked, and a view- 
screen lit up behind him. It showed a 
grotesquely humanized version of the 
sshmoona — like a centipede with hol- 
lywood teeth and a toupee. 

"Happy you could join us," said the 
image. The rattling continued, and the 
viewscreen gave simultaneous transla- 
tion. 

"I'd have rolled out to greet you," 
he said, "but my grievous affliction ... 
forbids it. The gout, you would call 
it." 


I nodded. The old bug must have a 
history of meat eating. It wasn't good 
for him, but he wanted more. Human 
nature. 

He went on: "My moist friend has 
told you of my interest. What news 
have you?" 

"Not good, sir." 

The viewscreen clattered softly, 
translating my words. Several of the 
sshmoona s feet trembled in response. 

I nervously explained the situation 
in the kitchen, stressing my close con- 
tacts on the staff. I suggested that a 
more thorough search of the emergen- 
cy freezers might just.... 

Several more feet waved; impa- 
tiently, I thought. 

"Surely you can do something for 
me," the sshmoona said. 

My damned reputation again. 
Where the hell do they get these ideas? 

I mean, sure. I'm good ... but, geez.... 

"You," the sshmoona said. "After 
all, you are a human being/' 

"Hey," I said, as humbly as possi- 
ble. "I give it my best shot." 

Frankly I was surprised at human 
boosterism coming from this giant 
bug. I mean, we lost the war and ev- 
erything, right? Score one to the ulti- 
mate diplomat. 

I went on: "Look, sir, I know we 
humans have sort of slipped off the 
ladder to the top of the old galactic 
heap, but we do have our good points. 
I appreciate your support. And I want 
to tell you rU do my damnedest to get 
you some meat." 


114 


Fantasy & Science Fiction 


1 winked. "Even if 1 have to do a lit- 
tle rough surgery down in Third Class, 
if you catch the way Tm drifting. What 
sort of meat do you think will do the 
trick?" 

"Meat?" he asked. "I don't just 
want meat/' 

"No?" There seemed to be a hot, 
dry wind blowing up my shirt. "What, 
uh, what do you want?" 

The sshmoona half rose from the 
couch. I stepped back, bounced off the 
bulkhead. 

It was time to lea^e. I just knew it. 

"I'll tell you what I want," he said. 
The soft rattle of his voice had become 
a loud crackling. "Meab is what I crave 

— and it's the only food that will 
satisfy your ... scatological require- 
ments." 

"Meab," I whispered. So the old 
recipe book was penned more accu- 
rately than I'd thought. Not that it 
mattered. "I don't think I have any, 
uh...." 

The alien's laugh was unmistakable 

— gak gak gak gak,,,. 

"You don't have it?" he roared. 
"You have nothing but\" 

"I don't, uh...." 

"Meab is flesh — your flesh." 

One funny thing about this: as bad 
as I felt at that moment — I'd feel a hell 
of a lot worse in five minutes. 

I had no sooner staggered out of the 
sshmoona s cabin than I was set upon 
by the Gryens goons. They wrenched 
me out of my funk and into the stink- 


ing presence of their boss. 

The Gryens voice seemed to pos- 
sess a timbre of almost hysterical giddi- 
ness. "So, my good friend, I see you 
are making excellent progress in our lit- 
tle quest." 

"Not really," I mumbled. 

"Ah, but you have located the ve- 
hicle of production." 

"The sshmoona!" 

"Exactly. And you have discovered 
the occult ingredient to my most eager- 
ly awaited morsel." 

"Meab . " 

"Precisely. This is really most excel- 
lent progress — though I'll admit it's 
taken you eons to assemble this modest 
package." 

"It's hopeless." 

"Not at all!" the Gryen roared. (Ev- 
erybody was yelling at me today.) He 
pointed a lethal digit at me. "And it an- 
gers me to hear an attitude of defeatism 
voiced. It's true you humans have 
stumbled on the path to galactic com- 
petence, but that's no reason to give 
yourself .over to these maladjusted 
mewlings. Buck up!" 

This creep was making me mad (the 
Gryens goons leaned forward 
eagerly), but I held myself back. 

"Look, sir," I said. "Most of you 
aliens either don't know or don't want 
to know how I supply their peculiar 
needs. But it's obvious you know all 
about the sshmoona and what I'll have 
to do. So why do you need me? Why 
don't you just deal directly with the 
sshmoona!" 


indigestion 


115 


“Let me try to explain/' said the 
Gryen. “I deal with you because you 
are the traditional go-between in such 
matters. I see no reason why you 
should be cheated out of your pieces of 
eight. And I deal with you because 
while it amuses the sshmoona to deal 
with you, it would not interest him to 
deal with me. These matters are rather 
distasteful to gentlemen. Am I clear?" 

"I guess...." 

He placed an icepick fingernail be- 
tween my eyes and whispered. "If you 
dare to discuss these ugly arrange- 
ments with me again, I will take your 
head between my fingers and pop your 
brains out through your eyeholes." 

“Fair enough." 

"Then we agree." He leaned back. 
"And now, just to solidify this meeting 
in your mind...." 

He motioned to his henchmen. 
They scrambled over and crammed my 
head into a tight-fitting cap. 

Before I could squawk, the "smil- 
ing" noses of the Gryen blurred and 
dissolved into a sheet of brilliant pain. 
I spent some time in a universe of 
agony — 6422 hours, 18 minutes, 38 
seconds. 

1 counted. 

It was all I had to do. , 

When it was over, the Gryen told 
me it'd all been nicely compacted into 
three and a half seconds. Just a sample. 

"Now," he said. "Go to work." 


Jertrude was already in bed, na- 


ked, wool socks on the nightst<md — 
ready for action. 

I dropped heavily onto the bed, up- 
setting the cracker-crumb palace she'd 
assembled on her stomach. 

She squealed. "Careful I" 

Very quietly I said, "Don't shout, 
Gertrude. I'm not in the mood for I 
shouting." 

She moved closer. "What are you 
in the mood for, stud?" 

"Oh God, Gertrude, not nowl" 

"You beast I" 

"Look, I'm in a real bind here, do 
you mind? I need a chunk of meat right 
about now. It's rather important. So I 
planned to do a little quiet thinking 
about it. All right?" 

She looked away, sulking. After a 
while she said, "I thought we agreed 
not to bring our jobs to bed." 

"I'm sorry." 

"I mean, I don't go around telling 
you how many of those animals want- 
ed seconds on jilla-cake tonight. Do I?" 

"No." 

"And I don't bend your ears off 
griping about how the flashcook con- 
sole gives me a little shock every time I 
turn around. Do I?" 

"Practically never." 

"And I don't — What do you 
mean, practically neverV 

"Oh God, Gertrude," I sobbed. "I 
need meat, and if I don't get some in 
about five minutes. I'm going to have 
to spend the next billion years in hell 
and still make it back in time for break- 
fast, after which there still won't be 


116 


Fantasy & Science Fiction ' 



any meat and I'll have to spend 
another ten trillion years in hell and 
it'll still only be lunch time and there 
won't be any meat and it'll still be three 
wormholes and a month of ramming 
before we can get to any place where 
they might have meat and by that time 
I'll have spent a trillion billion jillion 
years in hell with a little wind-up clock 
ticking away and me counting every 
damned tick-tick-tick-tick — " 

"Bobby I" 

"I'm all right/' I said. I took a deep 
breath. "I may just have to cut off an 
arm and cook it for an eight-foot centi- 
pede in a brown toupee. Routine stuff 
for us washroom menials." 

She examined me critically. "Some- 
times you worry me." 

"Leave me alone, Gertrude." 

But she wouldn't shut up after that. 
I stopped listening, but I couldn't stop 
looking at her. 

You know, Gertrude isn't half bad 
looking. Butt's too big, of course, but 
she had nice legs. Nice calves ... shape- 
ly ... meaty.... 

I reached down and grabbed her 
leg. "C'mon, honey, get dressed. We 
got work to do." 

The washroom was quiet during 
sleeptime. Gertrude sniffed at it. "This 
place is depressing." 

"You ain't seen nothing yet." 

The Beekie came in, half carrying 
the sshmoona. 

"Thank you both for coming so 
quickly," I said. 


I led everyone into the Maximum 
Security Stall and grabbed the gut accel- 
erator off the wall. "Shall we begin?" 

Gertrude screamed, and the hours 
were filled with hazard. 

The Gryen crouched in his cabin, 
flanked by the usual goons. 1 ap- 
proached with a small plastic container. 

"Ah," growled the Gryen. "Most 
propitious timing. How are you this 
fine morning?" 

"Fair." 

"Sleep well?" 

"Had to work." 

"Pity. And how's your temporary 
mate?" 

"I'm afraid she's in the hospital." 

"Pity." The Gryen "smiled." "Still, 
sacrifices must be made." He gestured 
at the box. "I presume this is the sub- 
stance contracted for?" 

I nodded. "And it must be consum- 
ed immediately to get the proper 
effect." 

"So I understand," he said, drool- 
ing a bit. 

1 brought the box to him and open- 
ed it. There was a sort of green fudge 
inside. He didn't move. "Not so fast, 
my friend." 

1 started to shake, as I knew I 
would when we got to this point. ^ 
"What's wrong?" 

"Just out of ... politeness, suppose 
we first offer some of this psychogenic 
confection to my loyal companions 
here." The goons leaned forward stu- 
pidly. 


Indigestion 


117 


I stammered, asking if there would 
be enough. 

"We shall see." 

The goons peeled off half of the 
stuff and shared it. In a few seconds 
they were laid back, "smiling," and 
growling euphoric reports to their 
boss. It was the Real Thing. 

The Gryen yanked the box from 
my hands and gobbled the contents. 
"You may go!" 

I sighed. "Gladly." 

I left the three of them sprawled 
happily on the padded deck. Gertrude's 
sacrifice was well appreciated — may- 
be that would cheer her up. I doubted 
it. 

I shut the cabin door, then quickly 
made it spacetight — just in case. 


In fifteen seconds there came two 
muffled explosions, close together. I 
heard the .Gryen roar in surprised ha- 
tred, then the third concussion — the 
big one — shook the bulkhead. 

I checked the seals for leaks and 
breathed a sigh of relief. 

Now I wanted to go see how Ger- 
trude was getting on. I'd taken about a 
kilo and a half of subcutaneous fat off 
her rump — just enough for the ssh- 
moona to produce a dopey coating for 
the Beekie's exploding crap. 

I turned away from the cabin door 
and grinned. 

One of the guests floated up to me 
and squeaked, "What was that explo- 
sion?" 

/ I shrugged. "Indi ... gestion.'" 



118 


Fantasy & Science Fiction 


The fine story below was winner of the 1980 Transatlantic Review 
award; this is its first publication. Its author writes that he is "twenty- 
nine, living in New York with my wife, Anne and our five-year-old 
daughter, Jenna. Tm a student in the Columbia University MFA 
writing program and have sold about a dozen stories to various 
publications, including New Dimensions, Galaxy and Isaac Asimov's/' 

Dinosaurs On Broadway 


BY 

TONY SAROWITZ 


A 

§ HLfter a month in New York, it 
seemed to Sylvia that everything she 
did was part of a dream. She looked 
across the desk at the interviewer, a 
Mrs. Vedicchio, and stared at the beau- 
tiful white hair piled on her head like 
whipped cream. "'New York isn't Ore- 
gon," Mrs. Vedicchio said, as if this 
was a point of subtle misunderstanding 
between them. Sylvia nodded. It was 
her third job interview of the day, and 
she was thinking about her own hair, 
which seemed limp and heavy to her, 
as if it were made of clay. In a certain 
sense, it was; Clay was her name. Her 
name was Sylvia Clay. "Perhaps if you 
had a master's," Mrs. Vedicchio went 
on, "or a few local references. Admin- 
istrative positions in parenting and ear- 
ly childhood are so hard to find these 
days." Sylvia nodded again and smiled, 
picturing herself eating Mrs. Vedic- 
chio's white hair with a spoon. 


She thought about hair while she 
walked to the subway station at 116th, 
and she made a list in her mind of a few 
things, besides Oregon, that New York 
was not. It was not warm in January, 
which was this month. It was not a 
gentle fragrance carried on the wind. It 
was not the Triassic, Jurassic, or Creta- 
ceous period of the Mesozoic era (this 
last item from a picture book about 
dinosaurs that she had bought for 
Madeline a week ago). She stood on 
the subway platform and looked at her 
wristwatch, thinking about how long 
she had before Maddy was due out of 
school. She thought about Maddy and 
looked at the yellow eyes of the ap- 
proaching train and thought about the 
noise, which was like the howl of a 
beast. She imagined that it was a beast, 
an armored ankylosaur, its tough hide 
scraping along the tunnel wall as it 
charged down the track. She closed her 


Dinosaurs On Broadway 


119 


eyes, and all her thoughts were pic- 
tures in her mind — subway trains, 
snowdrifts, white hair, dinosaurs, 
wildflowers. Then the platform tilted 
sixty degrees and she fell onto the 
tracks. 

Mishaps seemed to be a way of life 
for Sylvia in New York. There had 
been runaway buses, stray bullets fly- 
ing past her on the street. This, how- 
ever, was her first time in an ambu- 
lance. The noise of the siren was horri- 
ble. She sat up and tried to explain that 
she was fine, nothing wrong aside from 
a few scrapes and bruises, but the at- 
tendant cooed at her, "No, no," and 
gently eased her down onto the stretch- 
er. The ambulance wailed on. At the 
hospital, the admitting nurse insisted 
that she be examined, and although 
Sylvia could remember rolling safely 
off the tracks, she began to wonder if 
the train hadn't hit her after all instead 
of gliding by her like a screeching black 
cloud. She counted her fingers and toes 
in sudden paruc. "I feel ridiculous," she 
told the doctor, wide-eyed. "Is this a 
symptom of something, shock, concus- 
sion, to feel so entirely absurd?" 

She was sitting in a waiting area, 
sipping tea from a styrofoam cup when 
Richard arrived. He stood in front of 
her, hands on his hips, coat still but- 
toned, scarf immaculately tucked 
around his neck. "What's the bottom 
line, Syl?" he said. 

She tried to make a joke of it. "I 
can't get a job without training. I was 
just trying to get on the right track." 


He stared at her. "I'm fine," she said. "It 
was nothing,, really. In a minute I'm go- 
ing to pick up Maddy. They shouldn't 
have even called you. But I'm -glad 
you're here. If you're glad, that is. I 
hope you weren't in the middle of 
anything." 

"As long as you're all right, health- 
wise," he said. "Maddy and I would 
have a hell of a time coping if anything 
happened to you. You are all right, 
aren't you?" 

"Yes, Dick." She was accustomed 
by now to this new lingo of his, this 
bureaucratese. She told herself that it 
was a superficial manner of speach, 
nothing more, as if he'd adopted the 
accent and idiom of a foreign land. She 
stood and put on her coat. "Wife-wise, 
I'm fine." 

"Well." He clapped his hands in a 
businesslike manner. 'The office isn't 
expecting me back. We'll get Maddy, 
then eat out somewhere, give you an 
evening to recoup." He paused. "I 
mean, if it's all right with you. If I 
wouldn't be in the way." 

"Of course noV" she said, smiling. 
He nodded seriously and went to open 
the door. 

Sylvia often felt small on the streets 
of New York. It had to do with the 
height of the buildings and the density 
of the crowds. She was a small woman 
to begin with, just two inches over five 
feet. In the midst of a crowd she felt 
lost. 

She had fallen behind Dick on the 


120 


Fantasy & Science Fiction 


sidewalk. His walk had changed since 
they'd moved, his strides had become 
short and brisk. Watching him from 
behind made her think of aftershave 
ads. She ran up to him and took his 
arm, and he turned to her, an utter 
stranger. She stepped back, confused, 
speechless. The man barely glanced at 
her before walking on, and for a mo- 
ment, it seemed to her that any one of 
a dozen broad backs walking away 
from her on the street could be Dick's. 
Then she saw him. She took hold of his 
arm so tightly that he looked at her 
with surprise. 

"What are you thinking?" he asked. 

She shook her head. She was think- 
ing nothing that she could put into 
words. As they walked down the street 
together, she pictured a brachiosaur 
submerged to its hips in the East River, 
neck outstretched, tenderly nipping at 
the greenery of a penthouse garden ter- 
race. 

Dick waited outside while Sylvia 
talked to Maddy's first-grade teacher. 
"I'm worried about Maddy," Sylvia 
said. "She's been so quiet the past 
month, since we moved." 

Ms. Brown was an overweight 
black woman in her late fifties. She 
wore a cotton print dress — tiny yel- 
low ducks on a field of green. "Never 
you mind, Miz Clay," she said with a 
wide grin. "Your little girl's just fine. 
Why, given the paradigms of normalcy 
accepted by modern pedagogic 
thought, she's moving right along to- 


ward optimal self-actualization. Next 
year we might think on the possibility 
of issuing a few proximity reinforcers 
during the morning module, but then 
she'll have a new facilitator. She won't 
be my dumpling any more." 

This was something that Sylvia had 
thought a lot about, as much as she 
was able to think about anything, 
these days. "I just want to know if she's 
all right," she said. "I know something 
about children, what's healthy and 
what isn't. When we lived in Eugene, I 
organized parenting groups and child- 
care co-ops, I saw how Maddy acted 
with other kids. I know — " 

"Oooeee," Ms. Brown exclaimed. 
"You sure were something, Miz Clay. 
You say this was Eugene?" 

"Eugene, Oregon." 

"Is that in the USA?" Laughing, she 
put her palm firmly between Sylvia's 
shoulder blades and propelled her to- 
ward the door. "Your little girl's set- 
tling down to her new school just fine. 
You don't worry, now. Hear? Come 
on over here, Maddy. Your momma's 
waiting on you." 

Outside, Maddy ran for her father's 
arms. He lifted her high, then brought 
her down to eye level. "How's my^ 
pumpkin? How's my little girl?" 

Maddy opened her mouth and 
pointed at her throat. 

"Soon," he said. "We're eating 
Chinese food tonight.. Yum. At a res- 
taurant. How's that?" 

She nodded emphatically, then 
gave him a quick hug and squirmed to 


Dinosaurs On Broadway 


121 


be let down. They had always been 
close, father and daughter. Sylvia pull- 
ed her coat tighter and buttoned the 
collar. Snow had begun to fall. 

They walked down 73rd Street. 
Maddy ran ahead and waited at the 
comer. ''She was never this quiet back 
home. Back in Eugene," Sylvia said. 
"I'm worried about her." 

"She's fine," Dick said. He covered 
his head with his newspaper as they 
came to the comer. Maddy motioned 
for him to bend over. She stroked his 
chin, then wiggled her stubby fingers. 
Dick laughed. "I've told you a thou- 
sand times. I shaved because we mov- 
ed to New York. Men don't wear 
beards in New York." He took her 
hand and they started across the street. 

"Wait for the green," Sylvia called, 
then started across herself. A cab 
roared through the intersection. It 
squeeled its brakes and swerved,, 
spraying the sidewalk with black slush, 
missing her by inches. 

Late in the Cretaceous period, about 
100 million years ago, the Arctic 
Ocean and the Gulf of Mexico were 
connected by a vast shallow sea divid- 
ing North America in two. "Look at 
this, Maddy," Sylvia called, holding 
the picture book open on her lap. 
There was a diagram showing east and 
west America split by a ribbon of 
water as if a great tongue had licked 
the continent from Corpus Christi to 
Tuktoyaktuk on the Mackenzie Bay. If 


Columbus had sailed ICX) million years 
ago, if it was 100 million years ago 
now, they would have had to cross 
that ocean to reach New York. They 
would probably be speakers of separ- 
ate language, visitors from a foreign 
land. "Maddy?" 

She had fallen asleep on the mg by 
her dollhouse. "I'll get her," Sylvia 
said, although Dick had not moved 
from his chair. He looked embedded 
there, corporate tax forms piled high 
by his feet, on his lap, on the coffee 
table by his side. She pictured a pale- 
ontologist of the future working with 
pick and bmsh to extricate his fossil- 
ized remains from the easy chair, chip- 
ping with terrible patience at reams of 
petrified IRS returns, an impossible 
task, hopeless. 

She put Madeline to bed, then re- 
turned to the sofa and sat with her feet 
tucked under her. The book was still 
open to the same page. She traced the 
diagram of the inland sea with her fin- 
gertip, then looked to the illustration 
on the facing page, an artist's rendering 
of the scene. Brontosaurs wallowed in 
the shallows, munching on the top 
leaves of giant palms. Crested pteran- 
odons glided above the calm slate 
waters on leathery twelve-foot wings. 

"I wish you wouldn't put so much 
of your time into reading that stuff, 
Syl," Dick said. "We need to take a 
forward-looking approach to our new 
life here. If plants and animals were 
what we wanted, we could have look- 
ed for a place in the suburbs, Scarsdale 


122 


Fantasy & Science Fiction 


or White Plains or something." 

"Sorry." She shut the book and put 
it by her side. It was, after all, only a 
child's picture book, and she was tired; 
it had been a long day. Her hands 
wanted to open the book again, and so 
she clasped them on her lap and watch- 
ed Dick tap his pipe in the ashtray. She 
wished it was warm enough to op^ a 
window. She had enjoyed the smell of 
his tobacco in the house in Eugene, but 
it seemed cloying here in the apart- 
ment. She wondered if it had to do 
with the size of the rooms, or if it was 
some basic incompatibility of smoke 
with New York air, which had a flavor 
and density of its own. 

"Why are we here?" she asked. 

"Pardon? On this planet? In this 
room?" 

"I don't know what I was thinking 
about." Her hand fluttered in the air. 
"I'm sorry. You're in the middle of 
something." 

"No." He put aside the paper he'd 
been reading and looked at her. "We 
haven't been keeping proper track of 
our emotional inventory the past 
weeks, have we?" he asked. "How 
have you been getting along?" 

"Okay, I guess. A little crazy. I 
can't seem to get my feet on the 
ground." The understatement of the 
era. The largest dinosaurs were reput- 
ed to have had two brains, one in their 
head and another at the base of their 
tails. Sylvia felt as if she had half a 
dozen or more, each in contention 
with the others, all shouting out of 


turn. She tilted her head back against 
the sofa cushions and closed her eyes. 

"I suppose we have to expect a cer- 
tain restructuring of our day-to-day 
experience here. Any luck with the job 
hunt?" 

"No." She shook her head side to 
side without lifting it from the cushion. 
"No luck, no promises, no hope. No, 
no, no." She felt a shiver of giddy ex- 
haustion. 

"I hope you won't allow that inci- 
dent in the subway to impact negative- 
ly on your attitude toward living 
here." 

"It's not that. It's — " Her mind was 
empty. She opened her eyes and stared 
at the ceiling, the seams in the plaster 
visible through the new coat of white 
paint. Not a single word would come. 

"Sometimes," he said, and some- 
thing in his voice made her look at 
him, "sometimes you have to stop be- 
ing yourself so much, so that you can 
be yourself here, yourself in New 
York. It's not the same, psychologi- 
cally speaking." 

"I love you no matter where we 
are," she said. She put her head back 
on the cushion and closed her eyes. 
She should go to bed, she thought, or 
she would drift to sleep right here. She 
heard him shuffling papers, getting 
back to work. 

'Tou'll find a job," he said. "Ex- 
pertise is always marketable. And over 
the long term, I think you'll find you 
like living in New York. It's an exciting 
place. Alive." 


Dinosaurs On Broadway 


123 


Sylvia smiled, nodded. She too 
thought of New York as alive at times, 
a huge sluggish animal of asphalt and 
stone, slowly but surely digesting them 
all. She wanted to tell Dick how cor- 
rect he was. 

''I wonder what Fd know about 
you,'" he said, '"if I could read your 
mind.'" 

''I wonder what Vd know about 
me,'' she murmured. 

Sylvia woke in the dark. She felt 
Richard sitting up in the bed beside 
her. He cried out, a cry of loss rather 
than pain, a frightened, anguished 
sound. She sat up, held his arm firmly 
and put her other hand on the back of 
his neck. She called his name. He cried 
out again, more quietly this time, then 
fell limply back onto the bed. After a 
moment, he whispered, "Again?" 

She nodded, then realized that it 
was too dark for him to see. "Yes." It 
was the third time in the last four 
nights. 

"It's all right," he mumbled, turn- 
ing on his side away from her. "Never 
mind." He shook off her hand, hugged 
his pillow to his stomach. 

Sometimes she felt she knew him as 
well as she knew herself. Better. But 
sometimes she found herself watching 
him suspiciously, wondering if he was 
about to metamorphose into some- 
thing entirely unexpected, imagining 
that she might wake up some morning 
beside a stone, or a bird, or a clip- 
board. 


"Richard?" she called softly. Al- 
ready he was asleep. 

The weather report predicted a cold 
day. Sylvia laid Maddy's clothes out 
on the sofa — underwear, warm pants, 
turtleneck sweater — and went to cook 
breakfast. By the time the oatmeal was 
done, Maddy was dressed and playing 
on the living room floor with her Rag- 
gedy Ann doll. She flew the doll in fig- 
ure-eights through the air, making 
buzzing engine noises and laughing. At 
the table, she propped it up by her 
plate while she ate. 

"Going to be one cold day," Sylvia 
said, as if. to herself. "Looks like 
snow." Maddy looked at her doll, the 
cloth face, the idiotic smile, and shook 
her head slowly, sadly. The doll, with 
Maddy's hand behind it, commiserated 
with a shake of its own. 

Dick came out of the bedroom 
tucking in his shirt. He sat at the table, 
full of bluster and good cheer. "You 
have to prioritize your life," he said, 
banging the table with his fist. "Know 
what you want and take it." He reach- 
ed over and pinched Maddy's cheek, 
and she giggled. 

They left at the same time, Maddy 
and Dick. Sylvia put the dishes away 
and left a few minutes after. She didn't 
like being in the apartment alone. She 
felt uneasy there, despite the window 
gates and police lock. To her mind, 
protection implied the need for protec- 
tion, which in turn implied danger. 
The locks and bars made her feel like a 


124 


Fantasy & Science Fiction 


morsel, a nutmeat ripe within its shell. 

She stopped at the coffee shop on 
the comer, as she did every morning, 
and ordered a cup of tea. She held the 
cup in both hands, the heat in her 
palms, and looked into the tea. She 
saw shapes in the steam, animals rear- 
ing on their hind legs, strange birds in 
flight. She closed her eyes and felt her- 
self rising with the steam, a bird soar- 
ing up on a column of warm air. 

A man stood at the comer of 71st 
Street and Second Avenue. He was 
young, in his early twenties. He was 
dressed in ill-fitting clothes, and he 
wore no socks, although it was a very 
cold day. Above the black stubble on 
his cheeks, his skin was pale. 'Tor 
God's sakel" he shouted at the passers- 
by. "For God's sake!" Sylvia paused to 
watch him. Others looked away as 
they walked past. "What's the matter 
with everyong?" he yelled, rocking 
from one foot to the other, coming 
dangerously near the edge of his bal- 
ance. "Why doesn't anybody help? 
What's going on here?" He began to 
cry. 

"Ill help," Sylvia said. She stood a 
few steps away from him, afraid to 
come closer.. "Do you need food? 
Money? Are you — What can I do?" 

At each question he tried to speak, 
then shook his head. Sylvia felt embar- 
rassed. She went over and shook his 
arm gently, shocked by how thin it felt 
through his sleeve. "Do you need a 
doctor? Just nod. There's a restaurant 


over here. Can I buy you lunch?" She 
felt like a supplicant, as if she was 
more helpless than he. He waved his 
hand as if to motion her away. She 
found a ten dollar bill in her purse and 
stuffed it in his pocket. 

"Quick," he said. "How do you 
feel?" 

"What?" She stepped back. 

"Don't think. Damnit, you're los- 
ing it." He took a pen and a small dog- 
eared notebook from an inside pocket. 
"What was your feeling at the moment 
you gave me the money? How about 
guilt? Would you say you were feeling 
very guilty, fairly guilty, slightly guil- 
ty, or not at all — " 

Sylvia grabbed the notebook from 
his hand and threw it into the street. It 
vanished under the flow of cars. She 
watched a few loose pages pinwheel 
down the street, then turned her back 
and started away. "Why did you do 
that?" he called plaintively behind her. 
"What the hell was that for?" 

By the time she reached the next 
comer, he was yelling. "Just try to get 
your ten bucks back, bitch." 

It was 10:15; her appointment for 
an interview at the city's Agency for 
Child Development was for 11. She 
stopped at her bank, handed the teller 
her check and ID. He stared at her Ore- 
gon driver's license. "We've only been 
here a month," she explained. He look- 
ed from the picture on her license to 
her face, then back at the license. "Am 
I stiU me?" she asked, smiling. He 
pushed the money toward her across 


Dinosaurs On Broadway 


125 


the counter. He looked at her as if he 
could see the wall behind her, as if she 
wasn't there. 

She left the bank at 11:05. At first 
she assumed that her watch had some- 
how leapt ahead an extra half hour. 
She tapped the crystal face with her 
finger, then went back inside the bank. 
The clock on the wall and her watch 
agreed perfectly — 11:05, now 11:06. 
It was impossible. She knew that she 
had b^n in the bank for perhaps ten 
minutes, fifteen at the most. She stood 
there looking from one timepiece to the 
other, trying to reconcile her memory 
with the uncompromising hour. 

Outside, she walked slowly down 
Second Avenue, trying to think. She 
went past a pay phone, glanced at her 
watch. She was already ten minutes 
late. There was no excuse that she 
could think of, nothing for her to say. 
The ACD office was in the City Hall 
building on Church Street at the south- 
ern tip of Manhattan, a twenty-minute 
ride by cab. She began to walk more 
quickly, as if she could cover the 
ninety-four blocks on foot, as if she 
could arrive ten minutes before she 
started. She didn't notice the yellow 
rope lying across the sidewalk between 
66th and 67th, barely saw the work- 
man standing in the street, or heard the 
faint sound of the cable snapping five 
floors above. Still, all these signals 
came together somewhere in her mind, 
and she stopped short just as^he piano 
feU. 

It was a Steinway grand with a 


beautiful ebony finish. It fell five stor- 
ies in a second and a half, smashing to 
the ground with a demented, tortured 
chord, a lunatic twang. For a moment, 
the air seemed full of flying wood and 
wire, and then everything was still, 
and Sylvia was standing there, un- 
touched, with wreckage strewn all 
around. 

The workman had fallen in the 
street. Now he pushed himself to his 
feel and staggered over to her, clutch- 
ing his shoulder. He sat on the collaps- 
ed piano frame/ lowering himself gin- 
gerly onto it as if it was a delicate and 
valuable heirloom. 

"Are you all right?" Sylvia asked. 

He peeked under the hand at his 
shoulder, then shrugged. "Not good, 
not b^d," he said. "Jeanie, that's my 
youngest, she had her wisdom teeth 
pulled Wednesday, and now she sips 
her food through a straw and moans 
constantly. It's driving my wife crazy. 
And Billy, that's my second-oldest, he 
writes to me from school that he must 
have two hundred dollars to join a fra- 
ternity. My feeling is that for two hun- 
dred dollars he should forget fraternity 
and look for love, but I suppose that's 
what children are for. And you?" 

"I don't know," Sylvia said. "This 
city— It's been doing something to me. 
To all of us, my husband, and my 
daughter, and me." 

'^This something — could you be a 
little more specific?" 

"I don't know. I don't know." 

"Yes," he said, nodding thought- 


126 


Fantasy & Science Fiction 


fully. "I recall that you made the same 
point just a moment ago." 

"Everything is strange and unset- 
tled," she said. "Everything has to do 
with uncertainty and — " 

"And?" 

"Change. Tve been thinking a lot 
about change." 

"I have fifteen cents," he told her. 

A woman came out of the lunch- 
eonette across the street. 'Tve called an 
ambulance," she called to them. 
"They'U be here in a minute. Don't 
move. They'll be right here." 

"rU be leaving now," Sylvia told 
the workman. "I learned yesterday 
that I don't like ambulances." 

"It's good to learn something new 
every day." He blinked, looked 
around as if seeing the ruined piano for 
the first time, "So much for wings of 
song." 

"I like you," she said. "You're the 
first person I've found here that I like." 

He shrugged. "You'll find every- 
thing in this city, sooner or later. 
Everything is here." 

p 

iVichard called to say that he'd be 
late for dinner. "Incidentally," he said, 
"I forgot to mention it this morning. I 
like your hair blonde." 

"I am blonde, Dick, I've always 
been blonde." 

"Ah." There was a pause. "Well, I 
didn't say you weren't." 

Maddy was playing with her dolls 
when Sylvia tiptoed to the door and 


looked in. It had become a habit with 
her to approach Maddy 's room quiet- 
ly, almost stealthily, hoping to surprise 
her daughter in surreptitious talk. 
Now, standing at the door, she felt 
ashamed. "Come on sweetheart," she 
said. "I'll read you a book." 

Maddy paused, a doll in each hand, 
and frowned with the effort of decid- 
ing, She shook her head, no. 

"Your new dinosaur book," Sylvia 
said. Maddy didn't bother to answer; 
she had already handed down her deci- 
sion. "I'll be in the living room if you 
change your mind." 

Sylvia sat on the sofa and read 
about the extinction of the dinosaurs. 
Accordmg to the book, it was a mys- 
tery that no one could adequately ex- 
plain. At one moment of geologic time, 
they had covered the earth and filled 
the sky in all their grandiose reptilian 
glory, and the next moment they were 
gone, every one, almost before the 
rocks took notice. Sylvia became sad 
reading about it, and she turned back 
the pages to the earlier pictures, stego- 
saurs lumbering through the dense wet 
forests, pteranodons gliding through 
cloudless pink skies on wide membran- 
ous wings. She read until it was time to 
start dinner, and put the book reluc- 
tantly aside. 

She thought about change while 

she chopped cabbage on a board laid 

over the kitchen sink, different kinds 
« 

of changes: the shifting of colors be- 
neath her eyelids at night, the changes 
of distance, of time. The long knife 


Dinosaurs On Broadway 


127 


winked, rocking on its point. They 
were changing, Richard and Madeline, 
and she had to change as well, or she 
would die as the dinosaurs had died. 
She wondered what sort of fossils she 
would leave behind. She wondered if 
Richard would keep her in memory, 
with what color hair, and ^ the snap- 
shot of her would remain taped to 
Maddy's wall. 

She looked down. The cabbage 
was chopped past the point of cole- 
slaw, past the point of any use that 
came to mind. 

She left the knife on the cutting 
board and went into Maddy's room. 
'"Want to play house?" Maddy smiled, 
nodded. She was always hungry for 
partners at house. Sylvia knelt beside 
her and stroked her hair. Maddy thrust 
a doll into her hands impatiently, as if 
to say that this was no time for petty 
affection. Sylvia walked the doll to the 
front of the ramshackle dollhouse that 
Dick had built in Eugene from scraps 
of lattice and dowel. "Is anybody 
home?" she said, falsetto. "Fm a blind 
person looking for the Clay's house. Is 
this it? Is anyone here?" 

Maddy put her doll by the door- 
way and mimed opening a door. 

"I heard something," Sylvia said, 
"but Tm blind. I can't see. Who is it?" 

Maddy 's doU paused as if consider- 
ing; then it gently touched the shoulder 
of Sylvia's doll. 

Sylvia's doll moved back. "Don't 
push. You're scaring me. Please tell me 
who you are." 


Maddy left her doll on the floor of 
the dollhouse and sat hugging her 
knees. Sylvia touched her cheek. "Just 
one word. Your name. What you'd 
like for dinner tonight. Just to let me 
know you can." Maddy put her thumb 
in her mouth and closed her eyes. She 
looked to Sylvia like a three-year-old, 
like a two-year-old, like a newborn 
babe. 

When Sylvia heard Dick's key in 
the lock, she went to stand in the hall- 
way by the door. He looked tired 
when he came in, his shoulders hunch- 
ed as if the weight of the briefcase was 
more than he could bear. She pictured 
how she must look to him, arms cross- 
ed, spatula in hand, hair awry, apron 
bloodied with tomato sauce. "We have 
to do something about Maddy," she 
said. He blinked and looked past her 
toward the living room, but she would 
not stand out of his way. "She doesn't 
talk. Do you understand? There's 
something wrong with her. It's more 
than just shyness or reticence; she 
doesn't use words at all." 

He let the door swing shut behind 
him and dropped his briefcase on the 
floor. "Of course she does," he said. 
"Come out here for a minute, Maddy. 
Come on, pumpkin. Say something to 
your mom." Maddy came out of her 
bedroom, thumb in her mouth. Rag- 
gedy Ann doll dragging behind. 'Tell 
your mom ... oh, how school was to- 
day." 

Maddy looked from him to Sylvia. 
She took her thumb from her mouth. 


128 


Fantasy & Science Fiction 


'Tashut/' she said quietly. "Fortung 
pith quasley fass. Feezee un mung.'" 

'"You see?'' He peeled off his coat 
and hung it in the closet. "God, I'm 
tired." He eased himself into his cus- 
tomary chair and closed his eyes, his 
right hand groping for his pipe in the 
ashtray. 

"Dick," Sylvia said in the careful, 
even voice that a parent might employ 
in explaining life to a child. "Maddy is 
not speaking English. She is not speak- 
ing any language known to any crea- 
ture on this planet except herself. It 
was pretend. It wasn't real." 

"Absolutely. She's more innovative 
than half the people in my depart- 
ment." 

"Yes, but did you understand what 
she said?" 

"Of course." He looked at her with 
surprise. "Didn't you?" 

He woke up shouting again that 
night, his skin damp with sweat. Syl- 
via held his arm until it was over. 
"What was it?" she asked. "Please." He 
wouldn't reply, and a minute later he 
was asleep. 

Sylvia found herself stsuing into the 
darkness. She moved the box of tissues 
on the night table, uncovering the face 
of the digital clock. It was 3:18. She 
closed her eyes and tried to sleep, 
counting seconds, minutes. Finally she 
climbed out of bed and left the room, 
guided by the cold blue glow of the 
numerals. 

She went into the living room and 


sat in the easy chair, Dick's chair, in 
the dark. The seat was too wide for 
her, the armrests too far apart. She 
shifted uncomfortably, leaned against 
the armrest to her left. She tried to 
think about important matters, life, 
change, and found herself staring at 
the crisscross shadow on the ceiling, 
the window gates. Home, she told her- 
self firmly, speaking to her loneliness, 
her confusion, her fear. This is home. 

She left the apartment in the morn- 
ing with no destination in mind, walk- 
ing wherever the streets took her — 
south down Second Avenue, west on 
66th, south again on Third Avenue, 
and so on, making her way diagonally 
across the city. The air was filled with 
the music of the city, the clicking, 
buzzing, shrieking jam of people and 
machines, the smells of cigarettes, and 
food, and gasoline fumes. Sylvia walk- 
ed on, waiting for some sense of it all 
to reach her, hoping to discover her 
part, her place. 

The day had started with clear 
skies, but as she walked, dark clouds 
blew over the horizon from the west. 
Watching them move in, she imagined 
a rain of pianos plummeting to the 
ground, fortissimo (and briefly consid- 
ered a reign of pianos — "Ladies and 
gentlemen, our leader, the honorable 
and upright Baldwin."). The clouds 
spread across the sky, casting prema- 
ture dusk through the streets. She 
wondered if time played tricks in the 
city, if time could be as desultory as 


Dinosaurs On Broadway 


129 


weather here, Precambrian in the 
morning, Mesozoic in the afternoon, 
with patches of October in the west. 
Time was like a heartbeat in the city, 
she thought, an internal rhythm with 
only vague and half-felt connections to 
the sweep of time in the universe out- 
side, the earth rotating through its 
days and revolving through its sea- 
sons, the oscillations of an atom of 
cesium-133. Instead of clouds, those 
could be hours or eons thickening in 
the sky. 

She was strolling down a quiet resi- 
dential street in the west 30's, day- 
dreaming about time and the heartbeat 
of the city, when she first had the sense 
of being followed. She stopped and 
looked around; there were only a 
handful of pedestrians in sight, none 
familiar. She shook her head and went 
on, but something in her mood had 
changed, in her outlook on the day. 
She began to tire, to feel the cold, and 
the muscles in her legs were tight. She 
no longer had any clear idea of what 
she'd intended when she started out 
that morning. At the next comer she 
turned north, uptown, and started 
back to the apartment. 

It came to her again as she walked 
down 36th, the sensation that someone 
was behind her. She stopped in the 
middle of the block and waited, watch- 
ing, listening for sounds at the edge of 
her hearing. There was no one in sight 
at the moment. She looked at the win- 
dows of the houses. The row of brown- 
stones across the street seemed slump- 

130 


ed over in their places like tired old 
men with h^-open eyes, long cracks 
in the stones like the creases in aged 
flesh. She wondered if that was where 
the feeling was coming from, all the 
windows, and she smiled at herself, her 
foolishness, a nervous smile. Steam 
rose like hot breath from an op)en man- 
hole at the end of the block. There was 
nothing behind her but the city. 

She began to walk again, but the 
feeling persisted that something was 
there, keeping its distance like the re- 
flection of the moon on a lake. The 
feeling grew until she could no longer 
laugh at it, even nervously, and it be- 
came fear. On Sixth Avenue she found 
herself among people again, and she 
told herself that it was all right, there 
were people around her now, but her 
heart was leaping in her chest. It made 
no sense, but she was done with trying 
to make sense of the city. It was watch- 
ing her with hungry eyes. She imagin- 
ed it rising up around her, tongue of 
asphalt, jaws of stone. She imagined it 
opening beneath her feet. The sidewalk 
shivered as a subway car passed under 
her, and she started to run. 

She ran until there was no more 
breath in her, knowing that the city 
was running behind her, ahead of her, 
knowing that there was nowhere to go. 
Finally all her air was gone, and she 
stopped, head down, hands on her 
knees, all her mind in her pulse. 
"Look," someone said. "Look at her. 
Look." 

Sylvia was changing, slowly at first 

Fantasy A Science Fiction 


so that it seemed no more than a trick 
of light, and then faster and faster. Her 
skin grew grey and leathery. Her bones 
became hollow and light and changed 
in their proportions to each other so 
that she was forced to stoop over, to 
crouch. Her skull swept back, a plume 
of bone, and her mouth stretched into 
a long bill, hard and slender. She start- 
ed to speak, but whatever the thought 
was, it was lost in the making. All 
thought was difficult for her now. Her 
arms withered while the small finger of 
each of her hands lengthened until they 
touched the sidewalk. A thick mem- 
brane grew between her arms and her 
body, hanging in folds from armpit to 
ankle. She began to stagger on her tiny 
feet, so unsuitable for the ground, and 
she looked around her in panic, look- 
ing past the bodies surrounding her, 
looking for the sky. Her great wings 
opened at her sides, rising high above 
her shoulders, and as she stepped for- 
ward she brought them down and they 
billowed as they caught the air and 
flung her toward the sky. 

It was Dick's idea that they go to the 
Museum of Natural History that Satur- 
day. They strolled past totem poles 
and insects, primates and meteorites. 
Dick stood beneath a life-sized model 
of a blue whale suspended from the 
ceiling in the Hall of Marine Life. 'This 
is the sort of asset that you find only in 
a place like New York," he said. "This 
is the sort of benefit that makes it emo- 


tionally cost-effective to live here." He 
blew Sylvia a kiss, tousled Maddy's 
hair. 

Maddy looked tired, worn out by 
running from room to room ahead of 
them, disappearing for minutes at a 
time. "Hambur," she said, her cheek 
resting against Sylvia's hip. "Amburg." 
She had been speaking in recognizable 
word fragments since waking that 
morning. 

"There's a cafeteria in the base- 
ment," Sylvia said. "You two go 
ahead. I'll be along in a minute." 

The dinosaurs were on the fourth 
floor in a room without windows. The 
walls were institutional green. Sylvia 
made her way through the crowd, 
passing by the bones of hadrosaurs and 
pteranodons laid out in beds of plaster. 
She looked at them coldly and moved 
on. She stopped by a glass case in 
which was sprawled the mummified 
body of a pterosaur, the brittle black 
skin flush against the bones, the limbs 
askew, twisted not by agony but by 
geological disorder and the decsicating 
years. She sniffed, but the only odor 
she smelled was a faint whiff of smoke 
from a fugitive cigar. She walked to 
the center of the room where two large 
skeletons stood erect on a concrete 
platform behind a wooden rail, Trach- 
odon and Tyrannosaurus, the tops of 
their skulls inches from the eighteen- 
foot-high ceiling. Their bones were 
grey rather than white, etched with 
deep lines, empty of marrow. Sinuous 
metal poles embedded in the concrete 


Dinosaurs On Broadway 


131 


rose to support the long spines and 
massive heads. The poles looked alive, 
curving around hips and ribs to find 
each strategic place of support. Sylvia 
imagined them suddenly gone, imagin- 
ed the bones crashing to the floor, 
splintering like glass. 

She found Dick and Maddy at a 
table in the cafeteria and sat across 
from them. Maddy was full of energy 
again. Dick, sitting beside her, looked 
overworked and tired, in need of a 
more substantial rest than he could 
find in a single weekend. ''Something 
wrong?" he asked Sylvia. 

She shook her head. "Nothing. 
Nothing at all. Let me have a bite." She 
reached for Maddy's hot dog, and 
Maddy yanked it away, laughing, 
flinging sauerkraut across the floor. 
Dick stood up. 

"Let it stay," Sylvia said, making 
faces across the table at her daughter. 
"They'll clean it up. That's what we 
pay for." 

Sylvia, walking home from the gro- 
cery store, noticed the little man nearly 
a block away. He was less than four 
feet tall, and his head was bald, pink, 
and astoundingly round. He fell into 
step beside her, the hem of his tattered 
shearling coat slapping at his ankles as 
he hurried to keep pace with her. 
"Please," he said in a breathless high 
voice. "Anything you can spare. A 
nickel, a penny. Anything at all. 
Please?" 

Sylvia shifted the bag of groceries 


to her other arm and walked quickly 
on. A memory of him kept coming 
back to her that evening, a picture of 
his pie-pan face smiling up at her, 
beaming wifh hope while she ate her 
dinner, washed the dishes, sat before 
the TV. 

Sylvia woke in the night to the 
sound of Dick's cries. She tried to calm 
him as she had the other times. When it 
was over, they lay in the darkness to- 
gether, his skim damp with sweat, her 
head resting on his chest. She listened 
to the uneven sound of his breath for a 
minute. When he climbed out of bed, 
she followed him into the living room 
and sat on the sofa. She noticed how- 
well he fit the easy chair, how exactly 
he filled that space. 

"Perhaps," Dick said. He paused to 
clear his throat. "Perhaps we shouldn't 
have come here. Perhaps it was a nega- 
tive ... a mistake. A place like this is — 
I don't — Maybe you were right." 

She tsked at him. "Don't be silly. 
Everything's fine now. It's only sleepi- 
ness that's making you sad." She went 
over and sat on his lap, curling up to 
rest her head on his chest as if they 
were still in bed. 

"It isn't the way I thought it would 
be," he said. "Everything has changed. 
You've — " He hit the armrest with his 
fist. "Damn," he said. "DamnI" 

She snuggled against his chest 
again, leaned her head up to kiss the 
crook of his neck. "You'll get used to 
it," she said. 


132 


Fantasy & Science Fiction 



Drawing by Gahan Wikon 


AND AFTER MANY A SUMMER DIES THE PROTON 

If any of you aspire to the status of Very Important Person, let me warn 
you sulkily that there are disadvantages. For myself, I do my best to avoid 
VIP-dom by hanging around my typewriter in a state of splendid isolation 
for as long as possible. And yet — the world intrudes. 

Every once in a while, I find myself slated to attend a grand function at 
some elaborate hotel, and the instructions are "black tie." That means Tve 
got to climb into my tuxedo. It's not really very difficult to do so, and once 
T'm inside it, with the studs and links in place, with the tie hooked on and 
the cummerbund adjusted, I don't feel very different. It's just the principle 
of the thing. I'm not a tuxedo person; I'm a baggy-old-clothes person. 

Just the other night I was slated to appear, tuxedo-ablaze-in-glory at the 
Waldorf-Astoria. I had been invited — but I had not received any tickets. 

Whereupon I said to Janet (who made her usual wifely-suggestion that 
she seize her garden shears and cut great swatches out of my luxuriant side- 
bums and received my usual husbandly- refusal), "Listen, if we get there 
and they won't let us in without tickets, please don't feel embarrassed. 
We'll just leave our coats in the checkroom, go down two flights to the Pea- 
cock Alley and eat there." 


Science 


133 



In fact, I was hoping we'd be turned away. Of all the restaurants I've 
tried in New York, the Peacock Alley is my favorite. Tf\e closer we got to 
the hotel, the more pleasant was my mind's-eye picture of myself wreaking 
havoc with the comestibles at the Peacockian festive board. 

Finally, there we were, standing before a group of fine people who bar- 
red the way to the Grand Ballroom, with instructions to keep out the riff- 
raff. 

"I'm sorry," I said, firmly, "but I don't have any tickets." 

Whereupon a clear whisper sounded from one young woman on the 
other side of the table, "Oh, my goodnessl Isaac Asimov!" 

And instantly, Janet and I were hustled into the VIP-room and my 
hopes for the Peacock Alley went a-glimmering. * 

So let us turn by an easy progression of thought, to that VIP of the sub- 
atomic particles: the proton. 

Fully 90 percent of the mass of that portion of the Universe of which we 
are most aware — the stars — consists of protons. It is therefore apparently 
fair to say that the proton is the very stuff of the Universe and that if any- 
thing deserves the rating of Very Important, it is the proton. 

Yet just in the last year or so, the proton's proud position on the throne 
of subatomic VIP-dom has been shaken. 

In the first place, there is the possibility (see NOTHING AND ALL, 
February 1981) that it is not the proton after all that is the stuff of the Uni- 
verse, but the neutrino, and that the proton makes up only a very inconsid- 
erable portion of the Universal mass. 

In the second place, it is possible that the proton is not even immortal, 
as has long been thought, but that Safter many a summer each one of the lit- 
tle things faces decay and death even as you and 1. 

But let's start from the beginning. 

At the moment, there seem to be two fundamental varieties of particles: 
leptons emd quarks (see GETTING DOWN TO BASICS, September 1980). 

There are different sorts of leptons. First, there are the electron, the 
muon, and the tauon (or tau-electron). Then, there are the mirror-image 
particles, the anti-electron (or positron), the anti-muon and the anti-tauon. 
Then, there is a neutrino associated with each of the above: the electron- 
nuetrino, the muon-neutrino, and the tauon-neutrino, plus, of course, an 
anti-neutrino for each. 

*It was all right. It was a very good banquet and a lot of fun. 


134 


Fantasy & Science Fiction 


That means 12 leptons altogether that we know of, but we can simplify 
the problem somewhat by ignoring the anti-particles, since what we have 
to say about the particles will hold just as firmly for the anti-particles. Fur- 
thermore, we will not try to distinguish between the neutrinos since there is 
a good chance that they oscillate and swap identities endlessly. 

Therefore let us speak of 4 leptons — the electron, muon, tauon and 
neutrino. 

Different particles have different rest-masses. For instance, if we set the 
rest-mass of the electron at one, the rest-mass of the muon is about 207, 
and that of the tauon is about 3600. The rest-mass of the neutrino, on the 
other hand, may be something like 0.0001. 

Mass represents a very concentrated form of energy, and the general 
tendency seems to be for massive particles to change spontaneously, into 
less massive particles. 

Thus, tauons tend to break down into muons, electrons and neutrinos 
and to do it quickly, too. The half-life of a tauon (the period of time during 
which half of them will have broken down) is only about five trillionths of 
a second (5 X 10"^^ seconds). 

Muons, in turn, break down to electrons and neutrinos, but since 
muons are less massive than tauons they seem to last a bit longer and have 
half-lives of all of 2.2 millionths of a second (2.2 X 10"^ seconds). ♦ 

You might expect that electrons, then, might live a little longer still, and 
break down to neutrinos, and that neutrinos, after a perhaps quite respect- 
able lifetime, might melt away to complete masslessness, but that's not the 
ways it works. 

Leptons can't disappear altogether, provided we are dealing with parti- 
cles only, or anti-particles only, and not a mixture of the two. An electron 
and an anti-electron can combine and mutually annihilate, converting 
themselves into zero-mass photons (which are not leptons), but that's 
another thing and we're not dealing with it. 

As long as we have only particles (or only anti-particles), leptons must 
remain in existence; they can shift from one form to another, but cannot 
disappear altogether. That is "the law of conservation of lepton number" 
which also means that a lepton cannot come into existence out of a non- 
lepton. (A lepton and its corresponding anti-lepton can simultaneously 
come into existence out of non-leptons, but that's another thing.) And 
don't ask why lepton number is conserved; it's just the way the Universe 
seems to be. 

The conservation of lepton number means that the neutrino, at least, ' 


Science 


135 


should be immortal and should never decay, since no still-less-massive lep- 
ton exists for it to change into. This fits the facts, as nearly as we can tell. 

But why should the electron be stable, as it seems to be? Why doesn't it 
break down to neutrinos? That would not violate the law of conservation 
of lepton number. 

Ah, but leptons can possess another easily-measurable characteristic, 
that of electric-charge. 

Some of the leptons, the various neutrinos and anti-neutrinos, have no 
electric charge at all. The others — the electron, the muon and the tauon — 
all have an electric charge of the same size which, for historical reasons, is 
considered to be negative and is usually set equal to unity. Each electron, 
muon and tauon has an electric charge of -1; while every anti-electron, 
anti-muon and anti-tauon has an electric charge of +1. 

As it happens, there is a "law of conservation of electric charge" which 
is a way of saying that electric charge is never observed to disappear into 
nothing, or appear out of nothing. No lepton decay can affect the electric 
charge. (Of course, an electron and an anti-electron can interact to produce 
photons and the opposite charges, +1 and -1, will cancel. What's more, a 
lepton and an anti-lepton can be formed simultaneously, producing both a 
+ 1 and -1 charge where no charge existed before — but these are different 
things from those we are discussing. We are talking about particles and 
anti-particles as they exist separately. 

The least massive of the leptons with charge is the electron. That means 
that though more massive leptons can easily decay to the electron, the elec- 
tron cannot decay because there is nothing less massive which can hold an 
electric charge, and that electric charge must continue to exist. 

To summarize then: 

Muons and tauons can come into existence under conditions where the 
general energy-concentration is locally very high, say, in connection with 
particle accelerators or cosmic ray bombardment; but once formed, they 
cannot last for long. Under ordinary conditions, removed from high- 
energy events, we would find neither muons nor tauons, and the Universal 
content of leptons is restricted to the electron and the neutrino. (Even the 
anti-electron does not exist in significant numbers for reasons to be taken 
up another time.) 

Let us pass on next to the other basic variety of particle, the quark. 
Quarks, like leptons, exist in a number of varieties, but with a number of 
important differences. 


136 


Fantasy & Science Fiction 


For one thing, quarks carry fractional electric charges, such as + Va and 
-Va. (Anti-quarks have charges of -Va and +V 3 , naturally.) 

Furthermore, the quarks are subject to the '"strong interaction," which 
is enormously more intense than the "weak interaction" to which leptons 
are subject. The intensity of the strong interaction makes it unlikely (even, 
perhaps, impossible) for quarks to exist in isolation. They seem to exist on- 
ly in bound groups that form according to rules we needn't go into in de- 
tail. One very common way of grouping is to have three quarks associate 
in such a way that the overall electric charge is either 0, 1, or 2 (positive in 
the case of some, negative in the case of others). 

These three-quark groups are called "baryons," and there are large 
numbers of them. 

Again, however, the more massive baryons decay quickly into less 
massive baryons and so on. As side-products of this decay, mesons are pro- 
duced which are particles made up of only two quarks. There are no stable 
mesons. All break down more or less rapidly into leptons, that is, into elec- 
trons and neutrinos. 

There is, however, a "law of conservation of baryon number" so that 
whenever a baryon decays, it must produce another baryon whatever else 
it produces. Naturally, when you get to the baryon of the lowest possible 
mass, no further decay can take place. 

The two baryons of lowest mass are the proton and the neutron, so that 
any other baryon of the many dozens that can exist quickly slides down the 
mass scale to become either a proton or a neutron. These two baryons are 
the only ones that exist in the Universe under the ordinary conditions that 
surround us. They tend to combine in varying numbers to form the atomic 
nuclei. 

The proton and neutron differ, most obviously in the fact that the pro- 
ton has an electric charge of +1, while that of the neutron is 0. Naturally, 
atomic nuclei, which are made up of protons and neutrons, all carry a posi- 
tive electric charge of quantity equal to the number of protons present. 
(There are also such things as anti-protons with a charge of -1, and anti- 
neutrons which differ from neutrons in magnetic properties, and these 
group together, to form negatively-charged nuclei and anti-matter, but 
never mind that right now.) 

The positively-charged nuclei attract negatively-charged electrons in 
numbers that suffice to neutralize the particular nuclear charge, thus form- 
ing the different atoms with which we are familiar. Different atoms, by 
transferring or sharing one or more electrons, form molecules. 


Science 


137 


But the proton and neutron differ slightly in mass, too. If we call the 
electron's mass one, then the proton's mass is 1836 and the neutron's mass 
is 1838. 

When the two exist in combination in nuclei, they tend to even out their 
properties and to become, in effect, equivalent particles. Inside nuclei, they 
can be lumped together and referred to as "nucleons." The entire nucleus is 
then stable, although there are nuclei where the proton-neutron mixture is 
not of the proper ratio to allow a perfect evening-out of properties, and 
which are therefore radioactive — but that's another story. 

When the neutron is in isolation, however, it is not stable. It tends to 
decay into the slightly less massive proton. It emits an electron, which car- 
ries off a negative charge, leaving a positive charge behind on what had 
been a neutron. (This simultaneous production of a negative and a positive 
charge does not violate the law of conservation of electric charge.) A neu- 
trino is also formed. 

The mass difference between proton and neutron is so small that the 
neutron doesn't decay rapidly. The half-life of the isolated neutron is about 
12 minutes. 

This means that the neutron can exist for a considerable length of time 
only when it is in combination with protons, forming an atomic nucleus. 
The proton, on the other hand, can exist all by itself for indefinite periods 
and can, all by itself, form an atomic nucleus, with a single electron circling 
it — forming the ordinary hydrogen atom. 

The proton is thus the only truly stable baryon in existence. It, along 
with the electron and the neutrino (plus a few neutrons that exist in atomic 
nuclei), make up virtually all the rest-mass of the Universe. And since pro- 
tons outshine the others in either number or individual rest-mass, the pro- 
ton makes up 90 percent of the mass of such objects as stars. (The neutrinos 
may be more massive, in total, but they exist chiefly in interstellar space.) 

Consider the situation, however, if matters were the other way around 
and if the neutron were slightly less massive than the proton. In that case, 
the proton would be unstable and would decay to a neutron, giving up its 
charge in the form of a positively-charged anti-electron (plus a neutrino). 
The anti-electrons so formed would annihilate the electrons of the 
Universe, together with the electric charge of both, and left behind would 
be only the neutrons and neutrinos. The neutrons would gather, under the 
pull of their overall gravitational field, into tiny neutron stars, and those 
would be the sole significant structures of the Universe. 

Life as we know it, would, of course, be utterly impossible in a neutron- 


138 


Fantasy & Science Fiction 


dominated Universe, and it is only the good fortune that the proton is 
slightly less massive than the neutron, rather than vice versa, that gives us 
expanded stars, and atoms — and life. 

Everything, then, depends on the proton's stability. How stable is it? 
Our measurements show no signs of proton-decay, but our measurements 
are not infinitely delicate and precise. The decay might be there but might 
be taking place too slowly for our instruments to catch it. 

Physicists ate now evolving something called the "Grand Unified Theo- 
ry" (GUT), by which one overall description will cover the electromagnetic 
interaction (affecting charged particles), the weak interaction (affecting lep- 
tons), and the strong interaction (effecting quarks and quark-groupings 
such as mesons and baryons and atomic nuclei). 

According to GUT, each of the three interactions is mediated by "ex- 
change particles" with properties dictated by the necessity of making the 
theory fit what is already known. The electromagnetic exchange particle is 
the photon, which is a known particle and very well understood. In fact, 
the electromagnetic interaction is well-described by "quantum electrody- 
namics" which serves as a model for the rest of the GUT. 

The weak interaction is mediated by three particles symbolized as , 
W and Z°, which have not yet been detected. The strong interaction is me- 
diated by no less than eight "gluons," for whose existence there is 
reasonable evidence, albeit indirect. 

The more massive an exchange particle is, the shorter its range. The 
photon has a rest-mass of zero, so electromagnetism is a very long-range in- 
teraction and falls off only as the square of the distance. (The same is true 
of the gravitational interaction, which has the zero-mass graviton as the ex- 
change particle, but the gravitational interaction has so far resisted all ef- 
forts to imify it with the other three.) 

The weak-exchange particles and the gluons have considerable mass, 
however, and therefore the intensity of their influence falls off so rapidly 
with distance that that influence is measurable only at distances compara- 
ble in size to the diameter of the atomic nucleus, which is only a tenth of a 

«i "i 

trillionth of a centimeter (10“''^'^ centimeters) across or so. 

GUT, however, in order to work, seems to make necessary the exist- 
ence of no less than twelve more exchange particles, much more massive 
than any of the other exchange particles, therefore extremely short-lived 
and difficult to observe. If they could be observed, their existence would be 
powerful evidence in favor of GUT. 


Science 


139 


It seems quite unlikely that these ultra-massive exchange particles can 
be directly detected in the foreseeable future, but. it would be sufficient to 
detect their effects, if those effects were completely unlike those produced 
by any other exchange particles. And such an effect does (or, at any rate, 
might) exist. 

If one of these hyper-massive exchange particles should happen to be 
transferred from one quark to another within a proton, a quark would be 
changed to a lepton, thus breaking both the law of conservation of baryon 
number and the law of conservation of lepton number. The proton, losing 
one of its quarks, becomes a positively-charged meson that quickly decays 
into anti-electrons, neutrinos and photons. 

The hyper-massive exchange particles are so massive, however, that 
their range of action is roughly 10'^^ centimeters. This is only a tenth of a 
quadrillionth (10"^^) the diameter of the atomic nucleus. This means that 
the point-sized quarks can rattle around inside a proton for a long, long 
time without ever getting sufficiently close to one another to exchange a 
proton-destroying exchange particle. 

In order to get a picture of the difficulty of the task of proton-decay, 
imagine the proton to be a hollow structure the size of the planet Earth, and 
that inside that vast planetary hollow were exactly three objects, each 
about a hundred-millionth of a centimeter in diameter — in other words, 
just about the size of an atom in our world. Those “atoms'' ^ould have di- 
ameters that represent the range of action of the hyper-massive exchange 
particles. 

These “atoms," within that Earth-sized volume, moving about random- 
ly, would have to collide before the proton vyould be sent into decay. You 
can easily see that such a collision is not likely to happen for a long, long 
time. 

The necessary calculation makes it seem that the half-life for such pro- 
ton decay is ten million trillion trillion years (10^^ years). After many a 
summer, in other words, dies the proton — but after many, many, MANY 
a summer. 

To get an idea of howdong a period of time the proton's half-life is, con- 
sider that the lifetime of the Universe to this point is usually taken as 
15,000,000,000 years — fifteen billion in words, 1.5 X 10^^ years in expo- 
nential notation. 

The expected lifetime of the proton is roughly 6 hundred million trillion 
(6 X 10^^) times that. 

If we set the mighty life of the Universe as the equivalent of one second. 


140 


Fantasy & Science Fiction 


then the expected half-life of the proton would be the equivalent of two 
hundred trillion years. In other words, to a proton, the entire lifetime of the 
Universe is far, far less than an eyeblink. 

Considering the long-lived nature of a proton, it is no wonder that its 
decay has not been noted and that scientists have not detected the breakage 
of the laws of conservation of baryon number and lepton number and have 
gone on thinking of those two laws as absolutes. 

Might it not be reasonable, in fact, to ignore proton-decay? Surely a 
half-life of 10^^ years is so near to infinite in a practical sense, that it might 
as well be taken as infinite and forgotten. 

However, physicists can't do that. They must try to measure the half- 
life of proton decay, if they can. If it turns out to be indeed 10^^ years, then 
that is powerful support for GUT; and if it turns out that the proton is truly 
stable then GUT is invalid or, at the very least, would require important 
modification. 

31 

A half-life of 10 years doesn't mean that protons will all last for that 

long and then just as the last of those years elapses, half of them will decay 

at once. Those atom-sized objects moving about in an Earth-sized hollow 

could, by the happenstance of random movement, manage to collide after 

a single year of movement, or even a single second. They might, on the 

1 oc\ 1 non 

other hand, just happen to move about for 10 or even years 

without colliding. 

Even a 10^^-year half-life means there are protons decaying everywhere 

in the Universe in any given second. In fact, if the half-life of the proton 

were merely ten thousand trillion years (10^^ years) there would be enough 

proton decays going on within our bodies to kill us with radioactivity. 

0-1 

Even with a half-life of 10 years, there would be enough proton 
decays going on right now to destroy something like thirty thousand tril- 
lion trillion trillion protons (3 X 10^^) every second in the Universe as a 

whole, or three hundred thousand trillion trillion (3 X 10^^) every second 

1 ft 

in our Galaxy alone, or three million trillion (3 X 10 ) every second in our 

Sun alone, or three thousand trillion (3 X 10^^) every second in Jupiter 
alone, or three billion (3 X 10^) every second in Earth's oceans. 

This begins to look uncomfortably high, perhaps. Three billion proton 
decays every second in our oceans? How is that possible with an expected 
lifetime so long that the entire life of the Universe is very nearly nothing in 
comparison. 

We must realize how small a proton is and how large the Universe is. 


Science 


141 


Even at the figures I've given above it turns out that only enough protons 
decay in the course of a billion years throughout the entire Universe to be 
equivalent to the mass of a star like our Sun. This means that in the total 
lifetime of our Universe so far, the Universe has lost through proton-decay 
the equivalent of 15 stars the mass of the Sun. 

Since there are 10,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 (ten billion trillion or 
10^^) stai:s in the Universe as a whole, the loss of 15 through proton-decay 
can easily be ignored. 

Put it another way — In one second of the hydrogen fusion required to 
keep it radiating at its present rate, the Sun loses six times as much mass as 
it has lost through proton decay during the eqtire five-billion-year period 
during which it has been shining. 

The fact that, despite the immensely long half-life of the proton, decays 
go on steadily at all times, raises the possibility of the detection of those decays. 

Three billion decays every second in our oceans sounds as though it 
should be detectable — but we can't study the ocean as a whole with our 
instruments and we can't isolate the ocean from other possibly obscuring 
phenomena. 

Nevertheless, tests on considerably smaller samples have fixed the half- 
life of the proton as no shorter than 10^^ years. In other words, experi- 
ments have been conducted where, if the proton's half-life was shorter than 
10^^ years, protons would have been caught in the act of decaying — and ' 
they weren't. And 10^^ years is a period of time only 1/100 the length of 
10^^ years. 

That means that our most delicate detecting devices combined with our 
most careful procedures need only be made a hundred times more delicate 
and careful in order just barely to detect the actual decay of protons if the GUT 
is on the nose. Considering the steady manner in which the field of subatomic 
physics has been advancing this century, this is a rather hopeful situation. 

The attempt is being made, actually. In Ohio, the necessary apparatus 
is being prepared. Something like ten thousand tons of water will be gath- 
ered in a salt mine deep enough in the Earth to shield it from cosmic rays 
(which could produce effects that might be confused with those arising 
from proton decay). 

There would be expected to be 100 decays per year under these condi-^ 
tions, and a long meticulous watch may, just possibly, may, produce re- 
sults that will confirm the Grand Unified Theory and take us a long step 
forward indeed in our understanding of the Universe. 


142 


Fantasy & Science Fiction 


Jane Yolens distinctive fantasy stories have appeared in F&SF 
over the past several years, hut here she turns to science fiction 
with most satisfactory results. The story concerns an underwater 
project known as Hydrospace IV, which moves in a surprising 
direction. 


The Corridors of 
the Sea 


H 


BY 

JANE YOLEN 


‘e's awfully small for a hero/' 
said the green-smocked technician. He 
smirked as the door irised closed be- 
hind the object of his derision. 

'The better to sneak through the 
corridors of the sea/' answered his 
companion, a badge-two doctoral can- 
didate. Her voice implied italics. 

"Well, Eddystone is a kind of 
hero/' said a third, coming up behind 
them suddenly and leaning uninvited 
into the conversation. "He invented 
the Breather. Why shouldn't he be the 
one to try it out? There's only one 
Breather after all." 

"And only one Eddystone," the 
woman said, a shade too quickly. 
"And wouldn't you know he'd make 
the Breather too small for anyone but 
himself." 

"Still, he is the one who's risking 
his life." 

"Don't Cousteau us, Gabe Whit- 


comb." The tech was furious. 'There 
aren't supposed to be any heroes on 
Hydrospace. We do this together or we 
don't do it at all. It's thinking like that 
that almost cost us our funding last 
year." 

Whitcomb had no answer to the 
charge, parroted as it was from the 
very releases he wrote for the tele- 
reports and interlab memos, words he 
believed in. 

The three separated and Whitcomb 
headed through the door after Eddy- 
stone. The other two went down the 
lift to their own lab section. They were 
not involved with the Breather test, 
whose techs wore yellow smocks. 
Rather, they were working on 
developing the elusive fluid-damping 
skin. 

"Damned jealous Dampers," Whit- 
comb whispered himself as he stepped 
through the door. But at the moment 


The Corridors Of The Sea 


143 


of speaking, he knew his anger was 
useless and, in fact, wrong. The 
Dampers of the lab might indeed be 
jealous that the Breather project had 
developed faster and come to fruition 
first. But it should not matter in as 
compact a group as Hydrospace IV. 
What affected one, affected all. That 
was canon here. That was why hero- 
worship was anathema to them. All ex- 
cept Tom Eddystone, little Tommy Ed- 
dy stone, who went his own inimitable 
way and answered his own siren song. 
He hadn't changed, Gabe mused, in 
the twenty years they had been 
friends. The closest friends imaginable, 
since neither of them were married. 

Eddystone was ahead of him, in his 
bathing suit and tank top, moving 
slowly down the hall. It was easy for 
Gabe to catch up. Not only were Eddy- 
stone's strides shorter than most, but 
the recent Breather operation gave him 
a gingerly gait, as if he had an advanc- 
ed case of Parkinson's. He walked on 
the balls of his feet, leaning forward. 
He carried himself carefully now, com- 
pensating for the added weight of the 
Breather organs. 

"Tommy," Gabe called out breath- 
lessly, pretending he had to hurry and 
wanted Eddystone to wait. It was part 
of a built-in tact that made such an ex- 
cellent tele-flak. But Eddystone was 
not fooled. It was just a game they al- 
ways played. 

Eddystone stopped and turned 
slowly, moving as if he were going 
through water. Or mud. Gabe wonder- 


ed at the strain that showed in his eyes. 
Probably the result of worry since the 
doctors all agreed that the time for 
pain from the operation itself should 
be past. 

"Are you ready for the press con- 
ference?" Gabe's question was pro 
forma. Eddystone was always ready to 
promote his ideas. He was a man who 
lived comfortably in his head and al- 
ways invited others to come in for a 
visit. 

A scowl was Eddy St one's answer. 

For a moment Gabe wondered if 
the operation had affected Eddystone's 
personality as well. Then he shrugged 
and cuffed the little man lightly on the 
shoulder. "Come on, Tom-the-giant- 
killer," he said, a name he had invent- 
ed for Eddystone when they had been 
in grade school together and Tommy's 
tongue had more than once gotten 
them both out of scrapes. 

Eddystone smiled a bit and the tri- 
ple striations under his collarbones, the 
most visible reminders of the opera- 
tion, reddened. Then he opened and 
shut his mouth several times like a fish 
out of water, gasping for breath. 

"Tommy, are you all right?" Gabe's 
concern was evident in every word. 

"I've just been Down Under is all," 
Eddystone said in his high, reedy 
voice. 

"And..." Gabe prompted. 

Eddystone's mouth got thin. "And 
. . . it's easier Down Under." He sudden- 
ly looked right up into Gabe's eyes and 
reached for his friend's arms. His grip 


144 


Fantasy & Science Fiction 


was stronger than those fine bones 
would suggest. Eddystone worked se- 
cretly .with weights. Only Gabe knew 
about it. "'And it's becoming harder 
and harder each time to come back to 
shore." 

"Harder?" The question hung be- 
tween them, but Eddystone did not 
elaborate. He turned away slowly and 
once more moved gingerly down the 
hall towards the press room. He did 
not speak again and Gabe walked 
equally silent beside him. 

Once in the room, Eddystone went 
right to the front and slumped into the 
armed chair that sat before the charts 
and screen. He paid no attention to the 
reporters and Hydrospace aides who 
clusfered around him. 

Gabe stopped to shake hands with 
reporters and camera persons he recog- 
nized, and he recognized most of them. 
That was his job, after all, and he was 
damned good at it. For the moment he 
managed to take their attention away 
from Eddystone, who was breathing 
heavily. But by the time Gabe had 
organized everyone into chairs, Ed- 
dystone had recovered and was sitting, 
quietly composed and waiting. 

"Ladies and gentlemen," Gabe be- 
gan, then gave a bife smile. "Or rather I 
should say, friends, since we have all 
been through a lot together at Hydro- 
space IV." He waited for the return 
smiles, got them, and continued. 
"Most of you already know about our 
attempts here at the labs." He gestured 
to include the aides in his remarks. 


"And I know that some of you 
have made some pretty shrewd guesses 
as to Dr. Eddystone's recent disappear- 
ance. In fact, one of you..." and he 
turned to speak directly to Janney 
Hyatt, the dark-haired science editor 
of the ERA channels, "...even ferreted 
out his hospital stay. But none of you 
came close to the real news. So we are 
going to give it to you straight. 
Today." 

The reporters buzzed and the cam- 
era operators jockeyed for position. 

"As you can see. Dr. Eddystone is 
not in his usual three-piece suit." Gabe 
turned and nodded at the chair. It 
drew an appreciative chuckle because 
Eddystone rarely dressed up, jeans and 
a dirty sweatshirt being his usual fare. 
He never tried to impress anyone with 
his physical appearance since he knew 
it was so unprepossessing. He was less 
than five feet tall, large nosed, pop- 
eyed. But his quick mind, his brilliant 
yet romantic scientific insights, his 
ability to make even the dullest listener 
understand the beauty he perceived in 
science, made his sweatshirt a uniform, 
the dirt stains a badge. 

"In fact. Dr. Eddystone is wearing 
his swim suit plus a tank top so as not 
to offend the sensibilities of any watch- 
ers out there in newsland." 

Some of the reporters applauded at 
this but Janney Hyatt scowled. Even 
the suggestion of sensibilities filled her 
with righteous indignation, as if Gabe 
had suggested it was women's sensibili- 
ties he was referring to. 


The Corridors Of The Sea 


145 


"Dr. Eddystone has been Down 
Under, our designation of the water 
world around Hydrospace IV. It is his 
third trip this week and he wore just 
what you see him in now, minus the 
tank top of course. He was under for 
twenty minutes the first time. The se- 
cond time he stayed under forty 
minutes. And this last time — Dr. Ed- 
dystone?" 

Eddystone held his reply until ev- 
ery eye was on him. Then he spoke, his 
light voice carrying to the back of the 
room. "I was under sixty minutes. 1 
breathe harder on land now than I do 
in the sea." 

There was bedlam in the room as 
the reporters jumped up, trying to ask 
questions. Finally one question shout- 
ed above the others spoke for them all. 
"You mean you were under sixty mi- 
nutes without scuba gear?" 

"Without anything," said Eddy- 
stone, standing up for effect. "As you 
see me." 

The silence that followed was 
palpable and Gabe walked into it with 
his prepared speech. 'Tou know that 
living under water has always been the 
goal of this particular Hydrospace lab: 
living under water without mechanical 
apparatus or bubble cities." It was a 
slight dig at the Hydrospace labs I, II, 
and III, and he hoped he would be for- 
given it in the flush of their success. 
"That is what all our experiments, as 
secret as they have had to be, are all 
about. Dr, Eddystone headed the pro- 
ject on what we have called the Breath- 


er. Dr. Lemar's group has been work- 
ing on a fluid-damping skin." 

Everyone was listening. A few were 
taking notes. The cameras rolled. Gabe 
could feel the attention, and contin- 
ued. 

"When we first decided to prepare 
the bionics to allow a person to breathe 
water as easily as air, we took a lot of 
ribbing. Conservative marine biolo- 
gists dubbed our lab Eddystone s Folly 
and our group the Cousteau Corpora- 
tion. But we knew that the science was 
there. We had two possible approaches 
we were considering. 

"The first was to implant a mechan- 
ical system which would extract the 
dissolved oxygen from the water and 
present it directly to the lungs. From 
there on, normal physiology would 
take over. The other choice was to im- 
plant a biological system, such as gills, 
from some chosen fish, which would 
load the blood directly with oxygen, 
thus by-passing the lungs." 

Eddystone sat quietly, nodding at 
each point Gabe ticked off. Gabe look- 
ed around the room for questions. 
There were none. 

"Of course you realize," he con- 
tinued, "that both systems required the 
normal functioning of the musculature 
of breathing: one to pull the oxygen 
from the apparatus, the other to pass 
water over the implanted gills." 

Janney Hyatt raised her hand and, 
to soothe her earlier anger at his "sensi- 
bilities" remark, Gabe called on her at 
once. 


146 


Fantasy & Science Fiction 


''What was the mechanical system 
to be made of?" she asked. 

"Good question/' said Gabe. 'The 
earlier bionics experts felt more com- 
fortable with metal, plastics, and elec- 
tronics. So they opted for a di-oxygen- 
ation module, Doxymod, which was 
basically an add-on option for the un- 
derwater human. We were going to try 
it on some dogs first, water dogs, possi- 
bly Labradors or a springer spaniel. 
Trouble surfaced immediately." 

Laughter stopped Gabe until he re- 
alized his unintentional pun. He smiled 
and shrugged winningly and went on. 
"Making a Doxy mod small enough 
and light enough was the first problem 
of course. And once we had produced 
it — Dr. Eddystone and his staff pro- 
duced it — we could think of no good 
reason to implant it. It needed batteries 
and that meant it had a built-in time 
limit. Just what we had been trying to 
avoid. All we had. after all that work, 
was taiddess scuba gear. We were sim- 
ply replacing the oxygen tanks with 
batteries. More mobile, perhaps, 
but...." 

"In other words," added one of Ed- 
dystone's aides brightly, "not a fail- 
safe system. Batteries run down and 
need recharging." 

The reporters whispered together. 
One tentatively raised his hand, but 
Gabe ignored him. He felt things build- 
ing and, like any good performer, he 
knew it was time to continue. 

"So we turned to the gill system. 
Modem medicine had already solved 


the rejection syndrome, as you know, 
at least within phylum. Using pigs for 
heart valves and the like. But we knew 
nothing about cross-phyla work. We 
expected a lot of trouble — and were 
surprised when we encountered very 
little. Men and fish, it turns out, go 
well together. Something seafood lovr 
ers have long been aware of I In fact, it 
occurred to one of our bright-eyed tech 
threes on a dissertation project that we 
could even produce a classically com- 
posed mermaid with a small woman 
and a large grouper tail. Could — if 
anyone could think of good reason 
why, that is." 

It drew the laugh Gabe expected. 
Even Janney Hyatt smiled quickly be- 
fore reverting to her customary scowl. 

Gabe nodded once to his assistant 
sitting in the far back next to the pro- 
jector. She caught his signal and dim- 
med the lights, flicking on the projec- 
tor at the same time. The first slide fo- 
cused automatically above Eddystone's 
head. It was of a large tuna on a white 
background, with five smaller fish be- 
low it. Gabe took up the pointer which 
had been resting against the table and 
placed the tip on the blue. 

"A lot of time and thought went in- 
to the question of whether to use the 
gills of a human-sized fish like this tuna 
or an array of smaller gills taken from 
several fish, perhaps even from differ- 
ent species." He pointed in turn to the 
other fish on the screen, naming them. 
"But as often happens in science, the 
simple solution proved best. Two large 


The Corridors Of The Sea 


147 


gills were mserted in the skin, just un- 
der the collar bones.../' The next slide, 
a detailed sketch of a human figure, 
appeared. "And ducts leading from the 
brachael passages through triunal 
openings completed the alterations." 

The next slides, in rapid succession, 
were of the actual operation. 

"Valves were implanted, special 
plastic valves, that allowed either the 
lungs or the gills to be used. These 
went into the throat." 

"So you made an amphibian," call- 
ed out a grey-haired science writer 
from the Times, 

"That was our intention," said Ed- 
dy stone, standing up sjowly. The final 
slide, of fish in the ocean, had snicked 
into place and was now projected onto 
his body. He threw an enormous sha- 
dow onto the screen. 

Sensing an Eddystone speech, Gabe 
signaled his assistant with his hand, 
but she was already ahead of him, 
flicking off the projector and raising 
the lights. 

"But something more happened. 
Think of it," said Eddystone. "We can 
walk on the moon, but not live there. 
We cannot even attempt a landing on 
Venus or breatiie the Martian air. But 
the waters of our own world are wait- 
ing for us. They cradled us when we 
took our first hesitant steps into higher 
phyla. Why even now, in the womb, 
the fetus floats in la mer, the mother 
sea. Our blood is liquid, our bodies 
mostly water. We speak of human- 
kind's exodus from the sea as an im- 


provement on the race. But I tell you 
now that our return to it will be even 
more momentous. I am not an explorer 
... not an explorer taking one giant 
step for mankind. I am a child going 
home some million years after 
leaving." 

The speech seemed to have ex- 
hausted him. Eddystone slumped back 
into his chair. Gabe stood over him 
protectively. But his own thoughts 
warred with his emotions. Even for Ed- 
dystone it was a romantic, emotional 
outburst. A regular cousteau. Gabe 
knew that he had always been the 
more conservative of the two of them, 
but he worried anew that the Breather 
mechanism might be affecting Eddy- 
stone in ways that had not been calcu- 
lated. He put a hand on his friend's 
shoulder and was appalled to find it 
slippery with sweat. Perhaps a fever 
had set in. 

"That's all now, ladies and gentle- 
men," Gabe said smoothly to the audi- 
ence, not letting his alarm show. "To- 
morrow, tide and time willing, at 0900 
hours, we will give you a demonstra- 
tion of the Breather. Right now Dr. Ed- 
dystone has to be run through some 
last-minute lab tests. However, my as- 
sistants will see to it that you receive 
the information you need for the tech- 
nical end of your reports. Each pack 
has scientific and historical details,' 
charts, and a bio sheet on Dr. Eddy- 
stone, plus photos from the operation. 
Thank you for coming." 

The reporters dutifully collected 


148 


Fantasy & Science Fiction 


their material from the aides and tried 
to bully further answers from the staff 
while Gabe shepherded Eddy stone out 
the door marked NO ENTRY/TECH 
ONLY. It locked behind him and 
would only respond to a code that Hy- 
drospace workers knew. 

In the deserted back hall, Eddystone 
turned. "What last-minute tests?" he 
asked. 

"No tests," Gabe said. "Questions. 
And I want to do the asking. You are 
going to give me some straight an- 
swers, Tommy. No romances. No Cou- 
steaus. What's going on? I felt your 
shoulder in there. It's all sweaty. Are 
you running a fever? Is there rejection 
starting?" 

Eddystone looked up at him and 
smiled. "Not rejection," he said, 
chuckling a bit at a projected joke. 
"Rather call it an acceptance." 

"Make sense. Tommy. I'm a friend, 
remember. Your oldest friend." Gabe 
put out his hand as a gesture of good 
will and was surprised when Eddy- 
stone grabbed his hand, for his palm 
was slick. 

Eddystone took Gabe's hand and 
ran it up and down his arm, across his 
chest where it was exposed. The gill 
slits were closed but the tissue was 
ridged and slightly puckered. Gabe 
wanted to flinch, controlled it. 

"Feel this so-called sweat," Eddy- 
stone said. "You can't really see it, but 
it's there. I thought at first I was imag- 


ining it, but now I know. You feel it, 
too, Gabe. It's not sweat, not sweat at 
all. 

Gabe drew his hand away gently. 
"Then what the hell is it?" 

"It's the body's way of accepting its 
new life — underwater. It's the fluid- 
damping skin that Lemar and her kids 
have been trying for all these months. 
Seems you can't build it in, Gabe. But 
once the body has been re-adapted for 
life in the sea, it just comes." 

'Then we'd better test you out. 
Tommy. They lab is where you belong 
now." Gabe started walking. 

"No, don't you see," Eddystone 
said to Gabe's back, "that's not where I 
belong. I belong in the sea." His voice 
was almost a whisper but the passion 
in his statement was unmistakable. 

"Lab first. Tommy. Or there won't 
be any 0900 for you — or any of us -- 
tomorrow." Gabe continued to walk 
and was relieved to hear Eddystone's 
footsteps following him. He had sur- 
prised himself with the firmness of his 
tone. After all, Eddystone was the 
head of the lab while he, Gabe, was 
only the link with outside, with the 
grants and the news. Ye. eddystone 
was letting himself be lead, pushed, 
carried in a way he had never allowed 
before. As if he had lost his will power, 
Gabe thought, and the thought bother- 
ed him. 

They came into the lab and Gabe 
turned at last. Eddystone was as pale 
as fishbelly, and starting to gasp again. 
There was no sign of that strange sweat 


The Corridors Of The Sea 


149 


on his body, yet when Gabe took his 
arm to lead him through the door, he 
could feel the moisture. The skin itself 
seemed to be impregnated with the in- 
visible fluid. 

The lab was typical of Hydrospace, 
being half aquarium. It had small en- 
closed tanks filled with fish and sea life 
as well as a single wall of glass fronting 
directly on the ocean. Since the lab was 
on the lowest Hydrospace floor, rest- 
ing on ocean bottom, the window let 
the scientists keep an eye on the fish 
and plants within the ecosystem with- 
out the necessity of diving. For longer, 
far-ranging expeditions, there were 
several lab-subs and for divers work- 
ing within a mile radius of Hydro- 
space, a series of locks and wet-rooms 
leading off of the lab. There was no 
chance of the bends if a diver came and 
went from the bottom floor of Hydro- 
space IV. 

Only two techs were in the lab, 
both in their identifying yellow 
smocks. One was feeding tank speci- 
mens, the other checking out the data 
on the latest mariculture fields. They 
looked up, nodded briefly, and went 
back to work. 

"Look,'' Eddy stone said to Gabe in 
a lowered voice, "I'm going to go out 
there now and I want you to watch 
through the window. I'll stay close 
enough for you to track me. Tell me 
what happens out there. Wha^ you see. 
I know what I see. But it's like this 
skin. I need to know someone else sees 
it, too. When I come back in, you can 


test all night if you want. But you have 
to see me Down Under." 

Gabe shook his head. "I don't like 
it. Tommy. Let me get some of the 
techs. Lemar, too." 

Eddystone smiled that crooked grin 
that turned his homely face into an ir- 
repressible imp's countenance. "Just 
us, Gabe. The two of us. It's always 
been that way. I want you to see it 
first." 

Gabe shook his head again, but re- 
luctantly agreed. "If you promise to 
test...." 

"I promise you anything you 
want," Eddystone answered, a shade 
too quickly. 

"Don't con me. Tommy. I know 
you too well. Have known you too 
long. You are the one person who isn't 
expendable on this project." 

"I don't plan to be expended," Ed- 
dystone answered, grinning. He walk- 
ed to the door that led to the series of 
locks, turned, and waved. "And give 
those techs," he said, signaling with his 
head, "give 'em the night off." Then he 
was gone through the door. 

Gabe could hear the sounds of the 
pressure-changing device, clicking and 
sighing, through the intercom. He 
. went over to the techs. "Dr. Eddystone 
wants me to clear the lab for a few 
hours." 

"We were just leaving anyway," 
said one. To prove she was finished, 
she reached up and pulled out a large 
barrette that had held her hair back in 
a tight bun. As the blondish hair spill- 


150 


Fantasy & Science Fiction 


ed over her shoulders, she gave Gabe a 
quick noncommittal sn\ile and shrug- 
ged out of the yellow smock. She fold- 
ed it into a small, neat square and 
stowed it away in a locker. Her friend 
was a step behind. Once they had left 
the lab, Gabe turned on the red neon 
testing sign over the door and locked 
it. No one would be able to come in 
now. 

He went to the window and wait- 
ed. It took ten minutes for anyone to 
go through the entire series of locks in- 
to the water, over a half-hour for the 
same person to return. The locks could 
not be overridden manually, though 
there was a secret code for emergencies 
kept in a black book in Eddystone's file 
cabinet. He adjusted the special sea- 
specs that allowed him to see clearly 
through pressure-sensitive glass. 

Right outside the station grew a 
hodgepodge of undersea plants. Some 
had been set in purposefully to act as 
hiding places for the smaller fish, to en- 
tice them closer to the window for easy 
viewing. Others had drifted in and at- 
tached themselves to the sides of the 
station, to the rock ledges left by the 
original builders of Hydrospace, to the 
sandy bottom of the sea. 

While Gabe watched, a school of 
pout swam by, suddenly diving and 
turning together, on some kind of in- 
visible signal. Though he knew the 
technical explanations for schooling — 
that the movement as a unit was made 
possible by visual stimulation and by 
pressure-sensitive lateral lines on each 


fish responding to the minutest vibra- 
tions in the water, the natural choreo- 
graphy of schooled fish never ceased to 
delight him. It was the one cousteau he 
permitted himself, that the fish danced. 
He was smiling when the school sud- 
denly broke apart and reformed far off 
to the right of the window, almost out 
of sight. A dark shadow was emerging 
from the locks. Eddystone. 

Gabe had expected him to swim in 
the rolling overhand most divers af- 
fected. But, instead, Eddystone moved 
with the boneless insinuations of an 
eel. He seemed to undulate through the 
water, his feet and legs moving 
together, fluidly pumping him along. 
His arms were not overhead but by his 
side, the hands fluttering like fins. It 
was not a motion that a man should be 
able to make comfortably, yet he made 
it with a flowing ease that quickly 
brought him alongside the window. He 
turned once to stand upright so that 
Gabe could get a close look at him. 
With a shock, Gabe realized that Ed- 
dystone was entirely naked. He had 
not noticed it at first because Eddy- 
stone's genitals were not visible, as if 
they had retracted into the body cavi- 
ty. Gabe moved closer and bumped his 
head against the glass. 

As if the noise frightened him, Ed- 
dystone jerked back. 

"Tommy I" Gabe cried out, a howl 
he did not at first recognize as his own. 
But the glass was too thick for him to 
be heard. He tried to sign in the short- 
hand they had developed for divers 


The Corridors Of The Sea 


151 


outside the window. But before he 
•Could lift a finger, Eddystone had turn- 
ed, pumped once, and was gone. 

T 

I he second eyelid lifted and Eddy- 
stone stared at the world around him. 
The softly filtered light encouraged 
dreaming. He saw, on the periphery of 
clear sight, the flickerings of fish dart- 
ing. Some subtle emanation floated on 
the stream past him. He flipped over, 
righted himself with a casual cupping 
of his palms and waited. He was not 
sure for what. 

She came towards him trailing a 
line of lovers, but he saw only Her. 
The swirls of sea-green hair streamed 
behind Her, and there were tiny conch 
caught up like barrettes behind each 
ear. Her body was childlike, with un- 
derdeveloped breasts as perfect and 
pink as bubbleshells, and a tail that re- 
sembled legs, so deep was the cleft in 
it. When She stopped to look at him. 
Her hair swirled about Her body, 
masking Her breasts. Her eyes were as 
green as Her hair, Her mouth full and 
the teeth as small and white and round- 
ed as pearls. She held a hand out to 
him, and the webbing between Her fin- 
gers was translucent and pulsing. 

Eddystone moved towards Her, 
pulled on by a desire he could not 
name. But there were suddenly others 
there before him, four large, pullish- 
looking males with broad shoulders 
and deep chests and squinty little eyes. 
They ringed around Her, and one. 


more forward than the rest, put his 
hands on Her body and rubbed them 
up and down Her sides. She smiled and 
let the male touch Her for a moment, 
then pushed him away. He went back 
to the outer circle with the others, 
waiting. She held up Her hands again 
to Eddystone and he swam cautiously 
to Her touch. 

Her skin was as smooth and fluid as 
an eels, and his hands slipped easily up 
and over Her breasts. But he was both- 
ered by the presence of the others and 
hesitated. 

She flipped her tail and was away, 
the line of males behind Her. They 
moved too quickly for him, and when 
they left, it was as if a spell was bro- 
ken. He turned back towards the sta- 
tion. 

'Tommy,'' Gabe's voice boomed 
into the locks. "I hear you in there. 
Where did you go? One minute you 
were here, then you took off after a 
herd of Sirenia and were gone." 

The only answer from the intercom 
was a slow, stumbling hiss. Gabe could 
only guess that it was Eddystone's 
breathing readjusting to the air, as the 
implanted valves responded to the situ- 
ation. But he did not like the sound, 
did not like it at all. When the last lock 
sighed open, he was into it and found 
Eddystone collapsed on the floor, still 
naked and gasping. 

"Tommy, wake up. For God's sake, 
get up." He knelt t y Eddystone's side 
and ran his hands under his friend's 


152 


Fantasy & Science Fiction 


neck. The slipperiness was more 
apparent than before. Picking him up, 
Gabe had to cradle Eddystone close 
against his chest to keep him from 
sliding away. As Gabe watched, the 
gill slits fluttered open and shut under 
Eddystone's collarbone. 

'I've got to get you to 
MedCentral," he whispered into Eddy- 
stone's ear. "Something is malfunction- 
ing with the valves. Hold on, buddy. 
I'll get you through." He ran through 
the lab and was working frantically to 
unlock the door without dropping Ed- 
dystone when he looked down. To his 
horror, Eddystone had halfway open- 
ed his eyes and one of them was par- 
tially covered with a second, transpar- 
ent eyelid. 

"Take me ... take me back," Eddy- 
stone whispered. 

"Not on your life," Gabe answered. 

"It is on my life," Eddystone said in 
that same hoarse croaking. 

Gabe stopped. "Tommy." 

The membranous eyelid flicked 
open and he struggled in Gabe's arms. 
"It calls me," he said. "She calls." 

"Jesus, Tommy, I don't know what 
you mean — she. The sea? I don't even 
know what you are, anymore." 

"I am what we were all meant to 
be, Gabe. Take me back. I can't 
breathe." His gasping, wheezing at- 
tempts at talking had already confirm- 
ed that. 

Gabe turned around. "If I put you 
down, could you walk?" 

"I don't know. Air strangling me." 


"Then I'll carry you." 

Eddystone grinned up at him, a 
grin as familiar as it was strange. 
"Good. I carried you long enough." 

Gabe tried to laugh but couldn't. 
When they reached the locks, Gabe 
kicked the door open with his foot. 
"You're slippery as hell, you know," he 
said. He needed to say something. 

"The better to sneak through the 
corridors of the sea," said Eddystone. 

"God, Tommy, don't cousteau me 
now." 

Eddystone shook his head slowly. 
"But he was right, you know, Jacques 
Cousteau. The poetry, the romance, 
the beauty, the longing for the secret 
other. Someone sang, 'what we lose on 
the land we will find in the sea.' It's all 
out there." 

• "Fish are out there. Tommy. And 
reefs. And the possibility of vast farms 
to feed a starving humanity. And 
sharks. And pods of whale. The mer- 
maid is nothing more than a bad case 
of hominess or a near-sighted sailor 
looking at a manatee. Sea creatures 
don't build. Tommy. There are no 
houses and no factories under the wa- 
ter. Dolphin don't weave. Dugongs 
don't tell stories. And whale songs are 
only music because romantics believe 
them so. Come on. Tommy. You're a 
scientist. You know that. Metaphors 
are words. Words. They don't exist. 
They don't live." 

Eddystone gave him that strange 
grin once more and threw out an old 
punch line at him. "You call this liv- 


The Corridors Of The Sea 


153 


ing?" He tried to laugh but began to 
wheeze instead. 

Gabe punched the lock mechanism 
with his elbow and the door shut be- 
hind them, "I'm going Down Under 
with you this time. Tommy," he said. 

"Yes and no," Eddy stone answered 
cryptically. 

Eddystone lay on the bench and 
watched as Gabe picked out one of the 
fits-all trunks from a hook. He slipped 
out of his clothes and got into the swim 
suit, hanging his clothes neatly on a 
hanger. When the timer announced the 
opening of the next lock, he was ready. 
He picked Eddystone up and walked 
through into the second room. 

Despositing the little man on 
another bench, Gabe got into the scu- 
ba gear: There were always at least six 
tanks in readiness. 

"Remember the first time we learn- 
ed to dive?" Gabe asked. "And you 
were so excited, you didn't come off 
the bottom of the swimming pool until 
your air just about ran out and the in- 
structor had fits?" 

"I don't ... don't remember," Eddy- 
stone said quietly in a very distant 
way. 

"Of course you remember. Tom- 
my." 

Eddystone did not answer. 

They went into the next room, Ed- 
dystone leaning heavily on Gabe's 
arm. This was the first of the two wet- 
rooms, where the water fed slowly in 
through piping, giving divers time for 
any last minute checks of their gear. 

154 


No sooner had the water started in 
than Eddystone rolled off the bench 
where he had been lying down and 
stretched out on the floor. The rising 
water puddled around him, slowly 
covering his body. As it closed over 
the gill slits in his chest, he smiled. It 
was the slow Eddystone smile that 
Gabe knew so well. Eddystone ran a 
finger in and around the gill slits as if 
cleaning them. 

Gabe said nothing but watched as if 
he were discovering a new species. 

When the door opened automatic- 
ally, mixing the water in the first wet- 
room with the ocean water funneled 
into the second, Eddystone swam in 
alone. He swam underwater, but Gabe 
walked along, keeping his head in the 
few inches of air' In the last lock, Ed- 
dystone surfaced for a moment and 
held a hand out toward Gabe. There 
was a strange webbing between the 
thumb and first finger that Gabe could 
swear had never been there before. 
Blue veins, as meandering as old rivers, < 
ran through the webbing. 

Gabe took the offered hand and 
held it up to his cheek. Without mean- 
ing to, he began to cry. Eddystone 
freed his hand and touched one of the • 
tears. 

"Salt," he whispered. "As salty as 
the sea. We are closer than you think. , 
Closer than you now accept." 

Gabe bit down on his mouthpiece * 
and sucked in the air. The last door ^ 
opened and the sea flooded the rest of 
the chamber. 

Fantasy & Science Fiction ] 


Eddystone was through the door in 
an instant. Even with flippers, Gabe 
was left far behind. He could only fol- 
low the faint trail of bubbles that Eddy- 
stone laid down, A trail that was dissi- 
pated in minutes. There was nothing 
ahead of him but the vast ocean shot 
through with rays of filtered light. He 
kept up his search for almost an hour, 
then turned back alone. 

He quartered the ocean bottom, 
searching for Her scent. Each minute 
under washed away memory, 'til he 
swam free of ambition and only in- 
stinct drove him on. 

At last he slipped, by accident, into 
a current that brought him news of 
Her. The water, touching the fine hairs 
of his body, sent the message of Her 
presence to -his nerve cells. His body 
turned without his willing it towards 
the lagoon where She waited. 

Effortlessly he moved along, helped 
by the current, and scorning the 
schools of small fish swimming by his 
side, he raced toward the herd. 

If She recognized him. She did not 
show it, but She signaled to him none- 
theless by raising one hand. As he 
moved towards Her, She swam out to 
meet him, fondling Her own breasts. 

He went right up to Her and She 
drifted so that they touched. Her face 
on his shoulder, nuzzling. Then She 
ran Her fingers over his face and down 
both sides of his head, a knowing 
touch. As if satisfied, She moved 
away, but he followed. He touched 


Her shoulder. She did not turn, not at 
first. Then, after a long moment. She 
rolled and lay face up, almost motion- 
less, looking up at him. She spread 
apart the two halves of Her tail, expos- 
ing a black slit, and arched Her back. 
The not-quiet-scent struck him again, 
and all the males began to circle, slow- 
ly moving in. She flipped suddenly to 
an upright position, and a fury of bub- 
bles cascaded from Her mouth. The 
males moved back, waiting. 

Sh:^* turned to him again, this time 
swimming sinuously to his side. She 
ran Her fanned-out right hand down 
the front of his body, between his legs. 
He trembled, feeling the pulsing mem- 
branes drawing him out. He wanted to 
touch Her, but could not, some rem- 
nants of his humanity keeping him 
apart. 

When he did not touch Her, She 
swam around him once more, trying to 
puzzle out the difference. She put Her 
face close to his, opening Her mouth as 
if to speak. It was dark red and caver- 
nous, the teeth really a pearly ridge. 
Two bubbles formed at the comers of 
Her mouth, then slowly floated away. 
She had no tongue. 

He tried to take Her hand and bring 
it to his lips, but She pulled away. So 
he put his hands on either side of Her 
face and brought Her head to his. She 
did not seem to know what to do. Her 
mouth remaining open all the while. 
He kissed Her gently on the open 
mouth and, getting no response, press- 
ed harder. 


The Corridors Of The Sea 


155 


Suddenly She fastened onto him, 
pressing Her body to his, Her cleft tail 
twining on each side of his thighs. The 
suction of Her mouth became irresisti- 
ble. He felt as if his soul were being 
sucked out of his body, as if something 
inside was tearing, he tried desperately 
to pull back and could not. He opened 
his eyes briefly. Her eyes were sea- 
green,' deep, fathomless, cold. Trying 
to draw away, he was drawn more 
closely to Her and, dying, he remem- 
bered land. 

His body drifted up towards the 
light, turning slowly as it rose. The 
water bore it gently, making sure the 
limbs did not disgrace the death. His 
arms rose above his head and crossed 
slightly, as if in a dive; his legs trailed 
languidly behind. 

She followed and after Her came 
the herd. It was a silent processional 
except for the murmurations of the sea. 

When Eddy St one's hands broke 
through the light, the herd rose into a 
great circle around it, their heads 
above the water's surface. One by one 
they touched his body curiously, seem- 
ing to support it. At last a ship found 
him. Only then did they dive, one after 
another. She was the last to leave. 
They did not look back. 

T 

I he press conference was brief. The 
funeral service had been even briefer. 
Gabe had vetoed the idea of spreading 
Eddystone's ashes over the sea. ''His 
body belongs to Hydrospace/' Gabe 

156 


had argued and, as Eddystone's oldest 
friend, his words were interpeted as 
Eddystone's wishes. 

The medical people were wonder- 
ing over the body now, with its strange 
webbings between the fingers and toes, 
and the violence with which the 
Breather valves had been tom from 
their moorings and set afloat inside Ed- 
dystone's body. None of it made any 
sense. 

Gabe was trying to unriddle some- 
thing more. The captain of the trawler 
that had picked up Eddystone's corpse 
some eight miles down the coast claim- 
ed he had found it because "a herd of 
dolphin had been holding it up." Scien- 
tifically that seemed highly unlikely. 
But, Gabe knew, there were many 
stories, many folktales, legends, Cou- 
steaus that claimed such things to be 
true. He could not, would not, let him- 
self believe them. 

It was Janney Hyatt at the press 
conference who posed the question 
Gabe had hoped not to answer. 

"Do you consider Thomas Eddy- 
stone a hero?" she asked. 

Gabe, conscious of the entire staff, 
both yellow and green smocks, behind 
him took a moment before speaking. 
At last he said, 'There are no heroes in 
Hydrospace. But if there were; Tommy 
Eddystone would be one. I want you 
all to remember this: he died for his 
dream, but the dream still lives. It lives 
Down Under. And we're going to 
make Tom Eddystone's dream come 
true: we're going to build cities and 

Fantasy & Science Fiction 


farms, a whole civilization, down un- 
der the sea. I think — no, I know — he 
would have liked it that way.'' 

Out in the ocean, the herd members 
chased one another through the corn- 


dors of the sea. Mating season was 
over. The female drifted off alone. The 
bulb butted heads, then body surfed in 
pairs along the coast. Their lives were 
long, their memories short. They did 
not know how to mourn. 



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The Corridors Of The Sea 


157 


''3Cctfe^ 


Naked Girls and Other Goofs 

I thought you said that Walotsky 
was going to stay away from painting 
women? On the cover ol the same issue 
in which you said that (May 1981) Mr. 
Walotsky goofed again on his cover 
for 'The Thermals of August." 

The girl on the cover appeared to 
be naked. The author plainly said "My 
flight suit feels sticky along the small of 
my back;...." Would it not be assumed 
that all other kite pilots would also 
wear kite suits, especially since it 
would be cold and windy at high alti- 
tudes, and a suit would supply a place 
to attach the kite. The author also 
mentioned a helmet which the girl on 
the cover lacks. 

While Tm at it, I would like to note 
a few past errors. In your June 1980 
issue you published a story by Rey- 
nolds called "Hell's Fire." In this story 
they needed to stand inside of a large 
pentagram to "raise hell." For this they 
used the Pentagon in Washington, 
D.C. The Pentagon is riot a pentagram 
it is a pentagon. A pentagram, also 
called a pentacle, is a five sided star 
like is on the American flag. 

Then you had a cover for "The Call 
for the Dead" by Glen Cook on your 
July 1980 issue. The story said "A pen- 
tagram marked the floor surrounding 
it.", "it" referring to the chair in which 
the figure sat. On the cover, however, 
there is a hexagram or a Star of David 
or a Seal of Solomon in front of the 
chair. 

In most ways F&SF is a terrific 
magazine. Why must you mess it up by 
being careless as to what you put on 
your cover? To err is human but edi- 
tors are not supposed to be human. 


One last nit to pick: Don't you 
think the third or fourth week of 
March is a bit early for me to receive 
my May issue of your magazine? That 
is how early all of my issues of F&SF 
have been coming lately. If you have a 
legitimate reason for this please ex- 
plain. 

— Eric Schwarzenbach 
Haskell, N.J. 

The advance dating is done for the 
benefit of newsstand wholesalers and 
retailers, who tend to quickly return 
unsold any issue that approaches being 
dated. Thus the May issue is on sale 
during the month of April and mails to 
subscribers in mid-March. 

Neal Barrett's Planet, Far 

I have no idea how much influence 
you have with Mr. Neal Barrett, Jr. but 
I hope that you are both able and will- 
ing to insist that he continue his writ- 
ing, which he started so admirably in 
"A Day at the Fair" in your March 
1981 issue of F&SF, about the charac- 
ters he created (and the environment 
he created) on the planet Far. 

My interest in Science Fiction start- 
ed over 30 years ago and in all that 
time I can count the stories that I per- 
sonally consider SUPERB on one hand 
... the Far story line has just joined that 
group. I consider it equal to or perhaps 
better than McCaffrey's Pern story line 
and Henderson's People story line. 

Mr. Barrett's Far story reads as if 
there might have been one or more 
stories (books?) preceding it ... if so, I 
can't imagine how I would have missed 
them. Should there be any more Far 
stories I'd pay a lot to add them to my 


158 


Fantasy & Science Fiction 


library. Please let me know if you 
know of any and where I might be able 
to purchase them. 

— Verne R. Walrafen 
Ozawkie, KS 

Neal Barrett, Jr, is now working on a 
sequel to "A Day at the Fair. " 

Does "the Labor Day Group" exist? 

At the British Easter SF Conven- 
tion, at Leeds, Tom Disch expanded 
upon his remarks in F&SF, February 
1981 (on 'the Labor Day Group'). I 
think such a group as he describes does 
exist: perhaps for two reasons: (1) that 
writers feel compelled by commercial 
considerations to produce 'more of the 
same' (rather than 'something com- 
pletely different') because assured by 
their agents, editors, publishers, and 
readers that such work is more reward- 
ing; and, (2) that, given the relative im- 
portance of visual Sci-Fi, writers wish, 
by regarding their work as propagan- 
da, to draw attention to Science Fic- 
tion. Is SANDKINGS a re-definition of 
the genre for a new audience in terms 
comparable to (for example) NIGHT- 
FALL'S original definition? 

— A. Tidmarsh 
Peterborough, U.K. 

Coming up in F&SF: a response to the 
Disch article by George R.R. Martin. 

C. Priest: Exacting or Envious? 

Christopher Priest reveals an un- 
seemly amount of jealousy in his at- 
tempt to review THE SNOW QUEEN 
by Joan D. Vinge (F&SF, May 1981); 
whether because he did not, would 
not, or could not write a book of com- 
parable power is unclear. Also un- 
pleasant and inexplicable is Priest's 
failure to even mention a central con- 
cern of Vinge's book — women. One 


might as well try to review a major 
Cordwainer Smith work without men- 
tioning Underpeople and racism. In- 
stead, Priest .carps about Vinge's vo- 
cabulary. We were puzzled and disap- 
pointed by his review; it didn't do jus- 
tice to the book, to Vinge, or to Priest 
himself. 

—Paulette Dickerson 
& Mark Zimmermann 
Silver Spring, MD 

As you know from past letters I am 
pleased by most of the offerings in 
your magazine. I still think you have 
the competition beat by a country 
mile. 

I am not too fond of the "GUN- 
SLINGER" series — while I am a fan of 
Stephen King in the book length, I us- 
ually skip his shorter stuff or leave it 
until last. 

The same is true of the book re- 
views. In reading Christopher Priest's 
review of Barry Longyear's CITY OF 
BARABOO I am uncertain whether he 
is somewhat envious of Mr. Longyear's 
success upon which he seems to dwell 
or perhaps it is as Jack Woodford said: 
"Oftimes critical reviews are like St. 
Paul's remarks on sex; they indicate a 
lack of direct experience." 

At any rate, keep up the good 
work. I hope I am around for my sub- 
scription renewal in 1984. 

—Ben Smith 
Kevil, KY 

Our next special issue will be on Algis 
BudryS/ but while you're waiting.... 

I recently did a bit of interior decor- 
ation that I thought might amuse you. 

Recently, I moved into a larger 
apartment which allowed me an office 
for the first time in my career. For in- 
spiration, I mounted on the wall facing 
my desk all of F&SF's special author's 


Letters 


159 


issues in chronological order. For fur- 
ther inspiration, and as a private joke, 
I added an additional cover: the special 
Marc Scott Zicree issue of August, 
1983. 

Anyway, I just wanted to share this 
little bit of auto-entertainment with 
you. And Td like you to know that 
when I'm stuck on some particularly 
difficult turn of phrase, looking up and 
seeing those benevolent faces beaming 
down at me really does help. Thanks. 

— Marc Scott Zicree 
Los Angeles, CA 



More Letters? 

It is my opinion that F&SF is the 
best magazine in the field. F&SF is the 
only magazine where all the stories are 
consistentl}/ good. The only problem is 
the lack of a letter column. All the let- 
ters which you did print in the' three 
columns you printed last year were 
highly literate, . and written at a stan- 
dard approaching that of your stories. 
Clearly your editorial taste in choosing 


letters is as good as your taste for stor- 
ies. 

I feel that it is good for a magazine 
to provide a forum for constructive 
criticism. Authors may feel that they 
are benefited by the criticism they re- 
ceive (good or otherwise) in a letters 
feature. However, the main reason for 
having a letter column is to entertain 
or stimulate the readers. The letters 
you printed last year did both of these 
to me. All 1 ask is that you make the 
colunrm a monthly feature. 

Possibly it would be a good idea to 
lay down standards for your letter col- 
umn. State clearly what you think this 
column would be like and should be 
like. 

Congratulations on the outstanding 
excellence of your November & De- 
cember issues, particularly “Autopsy." 
F&SF is one publication I can always 
turn* to for well-written, enjoyable 
stories. 

—Mark Bahnisch 
Kerdon, Australia 

IVe do receive enough mail to print 
a monthly letters column, however I 
feel that most of it is not of enough in- 
terest to publish. I would like to use a 
letters column more frequently, but I 
do not want to fill it with hasty and su- 
perficial letters of praise, which, while 
appreciated, is the nature of much of 
the mail that we receive. The ideal let- 
ter is, as you say, either entertaining or 
stimulating, or it offers some reasoned 
praise or criticism of a story or an arti- 
cle. When I get more such letters, I will 
rush to publish them. 


160 


Fantasy & Science Fiction 



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